import itertools from collections import UserList from async_generator import async_generator, yield_ from .users import UserMethods from .. import utils from ..tl import types, functions, custom class DialogMethods(UserMethods): # region Public methods @async_generator async def iter_dialogs( self, limit=None, *, offset_date=None, offset_id=0, offset_peer=types.InputPeerEmpty(), ignore_migrated=False, _total=None): """ Returns an iterator over the dialogs, yielding 'limit' at most. Dialogs are the open "chats" or conversations with other people, groups you have joined, or channels you are subscribed to. Args: limit (`int` | `None`): How many dialogs to be retrieved as maximum. Can be set to ``None`` to retrieve all dialogs. Note that this may take whole minutes if you have hundreds of dialogs, as Telegram will tell the library to slow down through a ``FloodWaitError``. offset_date (`datetime`, optional): The offset date to be used. offset_id (`int`, optional): The message ID to be used as an offset. offset_peer (:tl:`InputPeer`, optional): The peer to be used as an offset. ignore_migrated (`bool`, optional): Whether :tl:`Chat` that have ``migrated_to`` a :tl:`Channel` should be included or not. By default all the chats in your dialogs are returned, but setting this to ``True`` will hide them in the same way official applications do. _total (`list`, optional): A single-item list to pass the total parameter by reference. Yields: Instances of `telethon.tl.custom.dialog.Dialog`. """ limit = float('inf') if limit is None else int(limit) if limit == 0: if not _total: return # Special case, get a single dialog and determine count dialogs = await self(functions.messages.GetDialogsRequest( offset_date=offset_date, offset_id=offset_id, offset_peer=offset_peer, limit=1, hash=0 )) _total[0] = getattr(dialogs, 'count', len(dialogs.dialogs)) return seen = set() req = functions.messages.GetDialogsRequest( offset_date=offset_date, offset_id=offset_id, offset_peer=offset_peer, limit=0, hash=0 ) while len(seen) < limit: req.limit = min(limit - len(seen), 100) r = await self(req) if _total: _total[0] = getattr(r, 'count', len(r.dialogs)) entities = {utils.get_peer_id(x): x for x in itertools.chain(r.users, r.chats)} messages = {m.id: custom.Message(self, m, entities, None) for m in r.messages} # Happens when there are pinned dialogs if len(r.dialogs) > limit: r.dialogs = r.dialogs[:limit] for d in r.dialogs: peer_id = utils.get_peer_id(d.peer) if peer_id not in seen: seen.add(peer_id) cd = custom.Dialog(self, d, entities, messages) if cd.dialog.pts: self._channel_pts[cd.id] = cd.dialog.pts if not ignore_migrated or getattr( cd.entity, 'migrated_to', None) is None: await yield_(cd) if len(r.dialogs) < req.limit\ or not isinstance(r, types.messages.DialogsSlice): # Less than we requested means we reached the end, or # we didn't get a DialogsSlice which means we got all. break req.offset_date = r.messages[-1].date req.offset_peer = entities[utils.get_peer_id(r.dialogs[-1].peer)] if req.offset_id == r.messages[-1].id: # In some very rare cases this will get stuck in an infinite # loop, where the offsets will get reused over and over. If # the new offset is the same as the one before, break already. break req.offset_id = r.messages[-1].id req.exclude_pinned = True async def get_dialogs(self, *args, **kwargs): """ Same as :meth:`iter_dialogs`, but returns a list instead with an additional ``.total`` attribute on the list. """ total = [0] kwargs['_total'] = total dialogs = UserList() async for x in self.iter_dialogs(*args, **kwargs): dialogs.append(x) dialogs.total = total[0] return dialogs @async_generator async def iter_drafts(self): """ Iterator over all open draft messages. Instances of `telethon.tl.custom.draft.Draft` are yielded. You can call `telethon.tl.custom.draft.Draft.set_message` to change the message or `telethon.tl.custom.draft.Draft.delete` among other things. """ r = await self(functions.messages.GetAllDraftsRequest()) for update in r.updates: await yield_(custom.Draft._from_update(self, update)) async def get_drafts(self): """ Same as :meth:`iter_drafts`, but returns a list instead. """ result = [] async for x in self.iter_drafts(): result.append(x) return result # endregion