@hades-ts/hades v0.0.7
Hades
Typescript bot framework using Inversify.js and Discord.js.

Installation
Install the latest version from Git using NPM:
npm i --save https://github.com/dustinlacewell/hades.gitExample
You can try a simple example bot here:
https://github.com/dustinlacewell/hades-example-bot
Getting Started
The basic bot starts with extending HadesBotService:
import { HadesBotService, singleton } from "hades";
@singleton(BotService)
export class BotService extends HadesBotService {
async onReady() {
console.log(`Logged in as ${this.client.user.username}.`);
}
}BotService.onReady() will be called when the associated Discord.js event is
fired and in this case log a message to the console.
We're using the @singleton() decorator here to bind BotService to itself
within the container as a singleton.
Container Setup
In our index.ts we can configure the container:
import "reflect-metadata";
import { HadesContainer } from "hades";
import { installTextCommands } from "hades/dist/text-commands";
import { BotService } from "./services/BotService";
const container = new HadesContainer();
const bot = container.get(BotService);
bot.login();In order for dependency injection to work, we need to import
reflect-metadata. Just a fact of life.
After creating the HadesContainer we can then request an instance of our
BotService.
We can finally login to Discord as the bot.
Writing the Config
Add your token to config/default.json:
{
"discordToken": "your bot token here"
}That's it. The bot should now boot up and connect to any servers you've added it to. Of course it doesn't do anything...yet!
Documentation
Please visit our documentation for more information:
Looking to contribute? Check out our Contributor Documentation.