Split everything into several functions, reused some more
common code (like accessing the "real" arguments instead
constantly filtering) and more, like using classmethods
instead staticmethods and then hardcoding the class name.
- Made the documentation even more friendly towards newbies.
- Eased the usage of methods like get history which now set
a default empty message for message actions and vice versa.
- Fixed some docstring documentations too.
- Updated the old normal docs/ to link back and forth RTD.
- Fixed the version of the documentation, now auto-loaded.
TLObject's __init__ used to call utils.get_input_* methods and
similar to auto-cast things like User into InputPeerUser as
required. Now there's a custom .resolve() method for this purpose
with several advantages:
- Old behaviour still works, autocasts work like usual.
- A request can be constructed and later modified, before the
autocast only occured on the constructor but now while invoking.
- This allows us to not only use the utils module but also the
client, so it's even possible to use usernames or phone numbers
for things that require an InputPeer. This actually assumes
the TelegramClient subclass is being used and not the bare version
which would fail when calling .get_input_peer().
Since uploading a file is done on the TelegramClient, and the
InputFiles are only valid for a short period of time, it only
makes sense to cache the sent media instead (which should not
expire). The problem is the MD5 is only needed when uploading
the file.
The solution is to allow this method to check for the wanted
cache, and if available, return an instance of that, so to
preserve the flexibility of both options (always InputFile,
or the cached InputPhoto/InputDocument) instead reuploading.
Caching the inputFile values would not persist accross several
days so the cache was nearly unnecessary. Saving the id/hash of
the actual inputMedia sent is a much better/persistent idea.
This removes the need for a .clear_cache() method as now files
are identified by their MD5 (which needs to be calculated
always) and their file size (to make collisions even more
unlikely) instead using the file path (which can now change).
Server salts change every 30 minutes after all, so keeping them
in the long-term storage session file doesn't make much sense.
Saving the layer doesn't make sense either, as it was only used
to know whether to init connection or not, but it should be done
always.