SendBotRequestedPeerRequest
Both users and bots may be able to use this request. See code examples.
---functions--- messages.sendBotRequestedPeer#91b2d060 peer:InputPeer msg_id:int button_id:int requested_peers:Vector<InputPeer> = Updates
Returns
| Updates | 
This type can be an instance of either:
| UpdateShort | UpdateShortChatMessage | 
| UpdateShortMessage | UpdateShortSentMessage | 
| Updates | UpdatesCombined | 
| UpdatesTooLong | 
Parameters
| peer | InputPeer | Anything entity-like will work if the library can find its Inputversion (e.g., usernames,Peer,UserorChannelobjects, etc.). | 
| msg_id | int | |
| button_id | int | |
| requested_peers | InputPeer | Anything entity-like will work if the library can find its Inputversion (e.g., usernames,Peer,UserorChannelobjects, etc.). A list must be supplied. | 
Known RPC errors
This request can't cause any RPC error as far as we know.
Example
from telethon.sync import TelegramClient
from telethon import functions, types
with TelegramClient(name, api_id, api_hash) as client:
    result = client(functions.messages.SendBotRequestedPeerRequest(
        peer='username',
        msg_id=42,
        button_id=42,
        requested_peers=['username']
    ))
    print(result.stringify())