0.1.0 • Published 6 years ago

chatbot-coroutine v0.1.0

Weekly downloads
3
License
ISC
Repository
github
Last release
6 years ago

chatbot-coroutine

Model chatbots as conversations. A coroutine that allows you to write chatbot conversations using generator functions.

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Rationale

Have you ever wrote chatbot code looking like this?

const data = {}

myChatbot.on('message', (user, msg) => {
	if (!data[user]) data[user] = {state: 0}
	const d = data[user]

	if (d.state === 0) {
		d.state = 1
		bot.send(user, 'Tell me foo!')
	if (d.state === 1) {
		d.foo = msg
		d.state = 2
		bot.send(user, 'Tell me bar!')
	} else if (d.state === 2) {
		d.state = 0
		bot.send(user, `foo: ${foo} bar: ${msg}`)
	}

	delete data[user]
})

Now this example is still very naive, as it doesn't handle invalid input and keeps data only in memory. But it demonstrates how such a structure can get quickly get very complex. Using chatbot-coroutine, you can model your converstional bot like you would reason about it: As one coherent flow of incoming and outgoing messages.

const createRespond = require('chatbot-coroutine')
const inMemStorage = require('chatbot-coroutine/in-mem-storage')

const conversation = function* (ctx) {
	let foo = yield ctx.prompt('Tell me foo!')
	let bar = yield ctx.prompt('Tell me bar!')
	yield ctx.send(`foo: ${foo} bar: ${bar}`)

	yield ctx.clear()
}

const respond = createRespond(inMemStorage, bot, conversation, console.error)
bot.on('message', respond)

To make the code handle crashes, write it like this:

const conversation = function* (ctx) {
	let foo = yield ctx.read('foo')
	if (!foo) {
		foo = yield ctx.prompt('Tell me foo!')
		yield ctx.write('foo', foo)
	}

	let bar = yield ctx.read('bar')
	if (!bar) {
		bar = yield ctx.prompt('Tell me bar!')
		yield ctx.write('bar', bar)
	}

	yield ctx.send(`foo: ${foo} bar: ${bar}`)
	yield ctx.clear()
}

Installing

npm install chatbot-coroutine

Usage

Write a generator function that represents the conversation the bot will have. See Rationale for an example.

const conversation = function* (ctx, user) {
	// instructions
}

Using createRespond, create a respond function from it. Pass in a storage adapter that fits your needs.

const createRespond = require('chatbot-coroutine')
const inMemStorage = require('chatbot-coroutine/in-mem-storage')

const respond = createRespond(inMemStorage, bot, conversation, console.error)
bot.on('message', respond)

storage adapters

const inMemStorage = require('chatbot-coroutine/in-mem-storage')
const levelDBStorage = require('chatbot-coroutine/leveldb-storage')(db)

API

createRespond(storage, bot, conversation, onError)

bot should have a send(user, msg) method.

conversation should be a generator function function, taking two arguments:

  • ctx: the context, allowing you to interact with the bot and the storage
  • user: the current user ID

ctx.msg()

Waits for a message from the user.

ctx.send(msg)

Sends a message to the user.

ctx.prompt(msg)

Shorthand for ctx.send(msg) + ctx.msg().

ctx.write(key, val)

Writes val at key to the storage. This is namespaced by the user.

ctx.read(key)

Reads the value at key from the storage. This is namespaced by the user.

ctx.clear()

Deletes everything in the storage. This is namespaced by the user.

implementing a storage adapter

storage should accept a user (working like a namespace) and have the following methods:

  • storage(user).write(key, val) -> Promise – should encode JSON
  • storage(user).read(key) -> Promise – should decode JSON
  • storage(user).clear() -> Promise

Contributing

If you have a question or have difficulties using chatbot-coroutine, please double-check your code and setup first. If you think you have found a bug or want to propose a feature, refer to the issues page.