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We have a vibrant community of developers helping each other in our Telegram group. Join us!
Stay tuned for library updates and new releases on our Telegram Channel.
This library provides a pure Python, asynchronous interface for the Telegram Bot API. It's compatible with Python versions 3.9 .
In addition to the pure API implementation, this library features several convenience methods and shortcuts as well as a number of high-level classes to
make the development of bots easy and straightforward. These classes are contained in the
telegram.ext
submodule.
After installing the library, be sure to check out the section on working with PTB.
All types and methods of the Telegram Bot API 8.1 are natively supported by this library. In addition, Bot API functionality not yet natively included can still be used as described in our wiki.
- Fully asynchronous
- Convenient shortcut methods, e.g. Message.reply_text
- Fully annotated with static type hints
- Customizable and extendable interface
- Seamless integration with webhooks and polling
- Comprehensive documentation and examples
You can install or upgrade python-telegram-bot
via
$ pip install python-telegram-bot --upgrade
To install a pre-release, use the --pre
flag in addition.
You can also install python-telegram-bot
from source, though this is usually not necessary.
$ git clone https://github.com/python-telegram-bot/python-telegram-bot
$ cd python-telegram-bot
$ pip install build
$ python -m build
To enable you to verify that a release file that you downloaded was indeed provided by the python-telegram-bot
team, we have taken the following measures.
Starting with v21.4, all releases are signed via sigstore.
The corresponding signature files are uploaded to the GitHub releases page.
To verify the signature, please install the sigstore Python client and follow the instructions for verifying signatures from GitHub Actions. As input for the --repository
parameter, please use the value python-telegram-bot/python-telegram-bot
.
Earlier releases are signed with a GPG key.
The signatures are uploaded to both the GitHub releases page and the PyPI project and end with a suffix .asc
.
Please find the public keys here.
The keys are named in the format <first_version>-<last_version>.gpg
.
In addition, the GitHub release page also contains the sha1 hashes of the release files in the files with the suffix .sha1
.
python-telegram-bot
tries to use as few 3rd party dependencies as possible.
However, for some features using a 3rd party library is more sane than implementing the functionality again.
As these features are optional, the corresponding 3rd party dependencies are not installed by default.
Instead, they are listed as optional dependencies.
This allows to avoid unnecessary dependency conflicts for users who don't need the optional features.
The only required dependency is httpx ~= 0.27 for
telegram.request.HTTPXRequest
, the default networking backend.
python-telegram-bot
is most useful when used along with additional libraries.
To minimize dependency conflicts, we try to be liberal in terms of version requirements on the (optional) dependencies.
On the other hand, we have to ensure stability of python-telegram-bot
, which is why we do apply version bounds.
If you encounter dependency conflicts due to these bounds, feel free to reach out.
PTB can be installed with optional dependencies:
pip install "python-telegram-bot[passport]"
installs the cryptography>=39.0.1 library. Use this, if you want to use Telegram Passport related functionality.pip install "python-telegram-bot[socks]"
installs httpx[socks]. Use this, if you want to work behind a Socks5 server.pip install "python-telegram-bot[http2]"
installs httpx[http2]. Use this, if you want to use HTTP/2.pip install "python-telegram-bot[rate-limiter]"
installs aiolimiter~=1.1,<1.3. Use this, if you want to usetelegram.ext.AIORateLimiter
.pip install "python-telegram-bot[webhooks]"
installs the tornado~=6.4 library. Use this, if you want to usetelegram.ext.Updater.start_webhook
/telegram.ext.Application.run_webhook
.pip install "python-telegram-bot[callback-data]"
installs the cachetools>=5.3.3,<5.6.0 library. Use this, if you want to use arbitrary callback_data.pip install "python-telegram-bot[job-queue]"
installs the APScheduler~=3.10.4 library and enforces pytz>=2018.6, wherepytz
is a dependency ofAPScheduler
. Use this, if you want to use thetelegram.ext.JobQueue
.
To install multiple optional dependencies, separate them by commas, e.g. pip install "python-telegram-bot[socks,webhooks]"
.
Additionally, two shortcuts are provided:
pip install "python-telegram-bot[all]"
installs all optional dependencies.pip install "python-telegram-bot[ext]"
installs all optional dependencies that are related totelegram.ext
, i.e.[rate-limiter, webhooks, callback-data, job-queue]
.
Once you have installed the library, you can begin working with it - so let's get started!
Our Wiki contains an Introduction to the API explaining how the pure Bot API can be accessed via python-telegram-bot
.
Moreover, the Tutorial: Your first Bot gives an introduction on how chatbots can be easily programmed with the help of the telegram.ext
module.
- The package documentation is the technical reference for
python-telegram-bot
. It contains descriptions of all available classes, modules, methods and arguments as well as the changelog. - The wiki is home to number of more elaborate introductions of the different features of
python-telegram-bot
and other useful resources that go beyond the technical documentation. - Our examples section contains several examples that showcase the different features of both the Bot API and
python-telegram-bot
. Even if it is not your approach for learning, please take a look atechobot.py
. It is the de facto base for most of the bots out there. The code for these examples is released to the public domain, so you can start by grabbing the code and building on top of it. - The official Telegram Bot API documentation is of course always worth a read.
If the resources mentioned above don't answer your questions or simply overwhelm you, there are several ways of getting help.
- We have a vibrant community of developers helping each other in our Telegram group. Join us! Asking a question here is often the quickest way to get a pointer in the right direction.
- Ask questions by opening a discussion.
- You can even ask for help on Stack Overflow using the python-telegram-bot tag.
Since v20.0, python-telegram-bot
is built on top of Pythons asyncio
module.
Because asyncio
is in general single-threaded, python-telegram-bot
does currently not aim to be thread-safe.
Noteworthy parts of python-telegram-bots
API that are likely to cause issues (e.g. race conditions) when used in a multi-threaded setting include:
telegram.ext.Application/Updater.update_queue
telegram.ext.ConversationHandler.check/handle_update
telegram.ext.CallbackDataCache
telegram.ext.BasePersistence
- all classes in the
telegram.ext.filters
module that allow to add/remove allowed users/chats at runtime
Contributions of all sizes are welcome. Please review our contribution guidelines to get started. You can also help by reporting bugs or feature requests.
Occasionally we are asked if we accept donations to support the development. While we appreciate the thought, maintaining PTB is our hobby, and we have almost no running costs for it. We therefore have nothing set up to accept donations. If you still want to donate, we kindly ask you to donate to another open source project/initiative of your choice instead.
You may copy, distribute and modify the software provided that modifications are described and licensed for free under LGPL-3. Derivative works (including modifications or anything statically linked to the library) can only be redistributed under LGPL-3, but applications that use the library don't have to be.