Remora.Discord is a C# library for interfacing with the Discord API. It is built to fulfill a need for robust, feature-complete, highly available and concurrent bots.
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- Extensive API coverage - does anything and everything you need
- Modern and active - uses contemporary technologies and usage patterns
- Fully asynchronous - do many things at once at scale
- Modular - swap parts of the library with your own implementations at will
- Integrated - slash commands, traditional interfaces, or stateless bots
Remora.Discord originates from the original author's frustration with many inconsistencies in various APIs in the C#/Discord ecosystem, both in relation to the Discord API itself and the language usage within existing solutions.
Therefore, Remora.Discord defines the following three goals that guides its development. These are shorter summaries - to read the full goal definitions and see examples, please refer to the Contributing Guidelines.
Correctness, in the context of Remora.Discord, means that the API available to the end user should as faithfully and accurately represent the actual reality of data presented to or from an API; that is, no data or structure of data should meaningfully change between the library receiving it and the user accessing it.
Robustness refers to a focus on never allowing problems originating from user data or real-life runtime conditions to bring down or otherwise corrupt the end user's application. The end user should be confident that, should an error arise, they will be aware of the fault potential before even compiling the application.
Remora.Discord aims to be truly asynchronous from the ground up, respecting and utilizing established best practices for C# and the TPL. Furthermore, it aims to be concurrent, allowing end users to react to and perform actions upon many incoming events at once.
Remora.Discord is currently fully usable, and has been released for public consumption.
The Discord Gateway API (v9) is fully implemented. The gateway client can connect, heartbeat, reconnect, resume, receive events, and send commands.
The Discord REST API (v9) is fully implemented.
The Discord Voice API is not implemented. If you'd like to contribute to the library, this would be an excellent start.
Remora.Discord's primary distribution format is via nuget - get it there!
If you wish to use or develop the library further, you will need to compile it from source.
git clone git@github.com:Nihlus/Remora.Discord.git
cd Remora.Discord
dotnet build
dotnet pack -c Release
Up-to-date documentation for the API, as well as a quickstart guide, is available online at the repository pages.
Please refer to the Samples for community-created example bots.
A note on versioning - Remora.Discord uses SEMVER 2.0.0, which, in short, means
Given a version number MAJOR.MINOR.PATCH, increment the:
- MAJOR version when you make incompatible API changes,
- MINOR version when you add functionality in a backwards compatible manner, and
- PATCH version when you make backwards compatible bug fixes.
Due to the rapidly- and often-changing nature of Discord's API, this means that changes to the MAJOR component of the version in components of the library may change almost every new release. Typically, new functionality in Discord's API means that new fields are added, types of fields change, or parameters sent to endpoints change.
Generally, these changes only affect the API and API.Abstractions packages - these will often increment their MAJOR versions. Dependant packages - such as Gateway or Rest - will update together with these packages, but unless their public API changes as a result, it will be considered a PATCH upgrade.
The consequences of this is that you may see source-level breakages when upgrading from one minor version to the next. While undesirable, it is an effect of Discord's uneven and inaccurate update cycle. Because of the way C# handles dependencies, however, it's unlikely that this would affect anything outside of normal development - as such, it's been deemed an acceptable degradation.
Remora.Discord does not follow a set release cycle, and releases new versions on a rolling basis as new features of the Discord API are implemented or documented.
As a bot developer, you should check in every now and then to see what's changed - changelogs are released along with tags here on Github, as well as in the individual package descriptions.
Whenever a new set of packages are released, the commit the releases were built
from is tagged with the year and an incremental release number - for example,
2021.1
.
See Contributing.
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