A wrapper for miniirc (GitHub, GitLab) to allow bots or clients made in miniirc to connect to (proprietary) Discord servers via discord.py with minimal code changes.
To use miniirc_discord, you already need to know how to use miniirc (GitHub,
GitLab). Instead of creating a miniirc.IRC object, however, you need to
use miniirc_discord.Discord. This is very similar, however has some
differences:
miniirc_discord.Discordobjects are created withminiirc_discord.Discord('TOKEN').- There is a
stateless_modekeyword argument. - The
discord_clientattribute returns an instance ofdiscord.Client, orNoneif stateless_mode is enabled. - There is a
get_server_count()method which returns the number of guilds the bot is in.
Channels will start in # if they are public and are currently just a channel
ID.
Some formatting from IRC to Discord should be translated nicely, however more complex codes and formatting from Discord to IRC are currently not.
Your bot will need to be able to request the "message content" intent for miniirc_discord to work properly.
The stateless_mode keyword argument will instruct discord.py to disable the
user cache and any intents not required by miniirc_discord. This should be
enabled if you are not using discord_client to cut back on memory and
bandwidth usage.
Since miniirc_discord 0.6.0, the stateless_mode keyword argument is True by
default.
TOKEN = os.environ['DISCORD_TOKEN']
irc = miniirc_discord.Discord(TOKEN)
channel = irc.discord_client.get_channel(channel_id) # Error!
# Disabling stateless mode will add a "discord_client" attribute
irc = miniirc_discord.Discord(TOKEN, stateless_mode=False)
channel = irc.discord_client.get_channel(channel_id) # No errorPRIVMSG operates like you'd expect and IRC formatting codes are converted to
markdown. You can use the +draft/reply IRCv3 tag to reply to a message.
This works similarly to PRIVMSG, except the CTCP ACTION is also converted to
a Discord /me.
NOTICEs are converted into embeds by miniirc_discord. To set an embed title,
you can add a bold line to the start of the embed:
irc.notice(channel, '\x02Embed title\x02\nEmbed content')You can add an IRC colour code to the start of the line to set the embed colour:
# Green embed
irc.notice(channel, '\x033\x02Embed title\x02\x03\nEmbed content')
# Light blue embed
irc.notice(channel, '\x0312\x02Embed title\x02\x03\nEmbed content')Older versions of miniirc_discord had a non-standard IRCv3 tag to set the embed title. This is still supported, however you should switch to the above syntax when possible.
You can add reactions to messages using the +draft/react message tag.
Example:
@irc.Handler('PRIVMSG', colon=False, ircv3=True)
def handle_privmsg(irc, hostmask, tags, args):
if args[1] == '$react':
irc.send('TAGMSG', args[0], tags={
'+draft/reply': tags.get('msgid'),
'+draft/react': '🆗️'
})AWAY will set the bot's "Playing" text. If you
want to change the prefix to something else, you can set the non-standard IRCv3
client tag +discordapp.com/type to (Playing, Streaming, Listening to or
Watching). The +discordapp.com/status tag can be set to 'online',
'idle', 'dnd' or 'invisible'.
You can install miniirc_discord with pip. On Linux-based systems, you would
do sudo pip3 install miniirc_discord. Version numbers should follow SemVer
since 0.4.0 and are no longer in sync with miniirc.
To get a Discord bot token and invite link, see this guide. Make sure you enable the message content intent in the bot settings page.