Skip to main content

Declarative, developer-friendly library for building Telegram bots

Project description

TeleKit

TeleKit Library

Telekit is a declarative, developer-friendly library for building Telegram bots. It streamlines common bot operations, automates routine tasks, and provides a clear, structured way to implement complex logic without boilerplate.

Telekit comes with a built-in DSL for defining scenes, menus, FAQ pages, and multi-step flows, allowing developers to create fully interactive bots with minimal code. The library also handles message formatting, user input, and callback routing automatically, letting you focus on the bot’s behavior instead of repetitive tasks.

self.chain.sender.set_text(Bold("Hello world!"))
self.chain.sender.set_photo("robot.png")
self.chain.set_inline_keyboard({"👋 Hello, Bot": self.handle_greeting})
self.chain.send()

Example taken out of context

@ main {
    title   = "🎉 Fun Facts Quiz";
    message = "Test your knowledge with 10 fun questions!";

    buttons {
        question_1("Start Quiz");
    }
}

@ question_1 {
    ...
}

Basic Telekit DSL example

Even in its beta stage, Telekit accelerates bot development, offering ready-to-use building blocks for commands, user interactions, and navigation. Its declarative design makes bots easier to read, maintain, and extend.

Key features:

  • Declarative bot logic with chains for effortless handling of complex workflows
  • Ready-to-use DSL for FAQs and other interactive scripts
  • Automatic handling of message formatting via Sender and callback routing
  • Lightweight, maintainable, and easy-to-extend code

GitHub PyPi Community Tutorial

Contents

Overview

To get the most out of Telekit, we recommend following the full, step-by-step tutorial that covers everything from installation to advanced features and DSL usage.

Even if you don’t go through the entire guide right now, you can quickly familiarize yourself with the core concepts of Telekit below. This section will introduce you to chains, handlers, message formatting, and some examples, giving you a solid foundation to start building bots right away.

Below is an example of a bot that responds to messages like "My name is {name}":

import telekit

class NameHandler(telekit.Handler):

    @classmethod
    def init_handler(cls) -> None:
        cls.on.text("My name is {name}").invoke(cls.display_name)

    def display_name(self, name: str) -> None:
        self.chain.sender.set_title(f"Hello {name}!")
        self.chain.sender.set_message("Your name has been set. You can change it below if you want")
        self.chain.set_inline_keyboard({"✏️ Change": self.change_name})
        self.chain.edit()

    def change_name(self):
        self.chain.sender.set_title("⌨️ Enter your name...")
        self.chain.sender.set_message("Please, type your new name below:")

        @self.chain.entry_text(delete_user_response=True)
        def name_handler(message, name: str):
            self.display_name(name)

        self.chain.edit()

telekit.Server("TOKEN").polling()

Let’s see how it works in practice 👇

Message formatting:

  • You can configure everything manually:
self.chain.sender.set_text("*Hello, user!*\n\nWelcome to the Bot!")
self.chain.sender.set_parse_mode("markdown")
  • Or let Telekit handle the layout for you:
self.chain.sender.set_title("👋 Hello, user!") # Bold title
self.chain.sender.set_message("Welcome to the Bot!")  # Italic message after the title

Approximate result:

👋 Hello, user!

Welcome to the Bot!

If you want more control, you can use the following methods:

self.chain.sender.set_use_italics(False)
self.chain.sender.set_use_newline(False)
self.chain.sender.set_parse_mode("HTML")
self.chain.sender.set_reply_to(message)
self.chain.sender.set_chat_id(chat_id)

# And this is just the beginning...

Want to add an image, document or an effect in a single line?

self.chain.sender.set_effect(self.chain.sender.Effect.HEART)
self.chain.sender.set_photo("url, bytes or path")
self.chain.sender.set_document("url, bytes or path")
self.chain.sender.set_text_as_document("Hello, this is a text document!")

Telekit decides whether to use bot.send_message or bot.send_photo automatically!

Text Styling with Styles

Telekit provides a convenient style classes to create styled text objects for HTML or Markdown:

Bold("Bold") + " and " + Italic("Italic")

Combine multiple styles:

Strikethrough(Bold("Hello") + Italic("World!"))

Then pass it to set_text, set_title, or other sender methods, and the sender will automatically determine the correct parse_mode.

For more details, see our tutorial

Handling callbacks and Logic

If your focus is on logic and functionality, Telekit is the ideal library:

Inline keyboard with callback support:

# Inline keyboard `label-callback`:
# - label:    `str`
# - callback: `Chain` | `str` | `func()` | `func(message)`
self.chain.set_inline_keyboard(
    {
        "« Change": prompt,  # Executes `prompt()` when clicked
        "Yes »": lambda: print("User: Okay!"),  # Runs this lambda when clicked
        "Youtube": "https://youtube.com"  # Opens a link
    }, row_width=2
)

# Inline keyboard `label-value`:
# - label: `str`
# - value: `Any`
@self.chain.inline_keyboard({
    "Red": (255, 0, 0),
    "Green": (0, 255, 0),
    "Blue": (0, 0, 255),
}, row_width=3)
def _(message, value: tuple[int, int, int]) -> None:
    r, g, b = value
    self.chain.set_message(f"You selected RGB color: ({r}, {g}, {b})")
    self.chain.edit()

Receiving messages with callback support:

# Receive any message type:
@self.chain.entry(
    filter_message=lambda message: bool(message.text),
    delete_user_response=True
)
def handler(message):
    print(message.text)

# Receive text message:
@self.chain.entry_text()
def name_handler(message, name: str):
    print(name)

# Inline keyboard with suggested options:
chain.set_entry_suggestions(["Suggestion 1", "Suggestion 2"])

# Receive a .zip document:
@self.chain.entry_document(allowed_extensions=(".zip",))
def doc_handler(message: telebot.types.Message, document: telebot.types.Document):
    print(document.file_name, document)

# Receive a text document (Telekit auto-detects encoding):
@self.chain.entry_text_document(allowed_extensions=(".txt", ".js", ".py"))
def text_document_handler(message, text_document: telekit.types.TextDocument):
    print(
        text_document.text,      # "Example\n ..."
        text_document.file_name, # "example.txt"
        text_document.encoding,  # "utf-8"
        text_document.document   # <telebot.types.Document>
    )

Telekit is lightweight yet powerful, giving you a full set of built-in tools and solutions for building advanced Telegram bots effortlessly.

  • You can find more information about the decorators by checking their doc-strings in Python.

Quick Start

Telekit is published in PyPI, so it can be installed with one command:

pip install telekit

You can write the entire bot in a single file, but it’s recommended to organize your project using a simple structure like this one:

handlers/
    __init__.py
    start.py    # `/start` handler
    help.py     # `/help` handler
    ...
server.py       # entry point

Here is a server.py example (entry point) for a project on TeleKit

import telekit
import handlers # Package with all your handlers

telekit.Server("BOT_TOKEN").polling()

Here you can see an example of the handlers/__init__.py file:

from . import (
    start, help #, ...
)

Here is an example of defining a handler using TeleKit (handlers/start.py file):

import telekit

class StartHandler(telekit.Handler):

    @classmethod
    def init_handler(cls) -> None:
        ...

One-file bot example (Echo Bot):

import telekit

class EchoHandler(telekit.Handler):

    @classmethod
    def init_handler(cls) -> None:
        cls.on.text().invoke(cls.echo) # accepts all text messages

    def echo(self) -> None:
        self.chain.sender.set_text(f"{self.message.text}!")
        self.chain.send()

telekit.Server("TOKEN").polling()

For a full walkthrough, check out our tutorial or see Examples


Developer

Telegram: Romashka

Gravatar: Romashka

Community


Changelog:

1.2.1

New Styles

  • Link - creates a clickable link ([text](url) in Markdown, <a href="url">text</a> in HTML)
  • UserLink - creates a link to a user with an optional pre-filled (default) message

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

telekit-1.2.1.tar.gz (55.7 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

If you're not sure about the file name format, learn more about wheel file names.

telekit-1.2.1-py3-none-any.whl (65.3 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file telekit-1.2.1.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: telekit-1.2.1.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 55.7 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/6.1.0 CPython/3.12.11

File hashes

Hashes for telekit-1.2.1.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 a38c70534a848631329100f45bcee5b5c3e9502ee84d8aff855605f184acc6c2
MD5 59431b6f24f05c8b61f0dfbcafcd95cf
BLAKE2b-256 13caa2fd37493095e988c399d606200b093b8c19584361860a101c2efd51c5f2

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file telekit-1.2.1-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: telekit-1.2.1-py3-none-any.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 65.3 kB
  • Tags: Python 3
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/6.1.0 CPython/3.12.11

File hashes

Hashes for telekit-1.2.1-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 f2dadc9c398adaf5a84bf0f10713c121263c0e6c0a2180f6496a7505f1928384
MD5 cc3eb471ceed5fce98b97e0827416efa
BLAKE2b-256 ae6e1efae72df19d8c2123c3b808114995798809e2eb4f2ccfb40fd15a46e2d0

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Monitoring Depot Continuous Integration Fastly CDN Google Download Analytics Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Error logging StatusPage Status page