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			230 lines
		
	
	
		
			7.8 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			ReStructuredText
		
	
	
	
	
	
| .. _accessing-the-full-api:
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| 
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| ======================
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| Accessing the Full API
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| ======================
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| 
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| .. important::
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| 
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|     While you have access to this, you should always use the friendly
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|     methods listed on :ref:`telethon-client` unless you have a better
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|     reason not to, like a method not existing or you wanting more control.
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| 
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| 
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| The :ref:`TelegramClient <telethon-client>` doesn't offer a method for
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| every single request the Telegram API supports. However, it's very simple to
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| *call* or *invoke* any request. Whenever you need something, don't forget to
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| `check the documentation`__ and look for the `method you need`__. There you
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| can go through a sorted list of everything you can do.
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| 
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| 
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| .. note::
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| 
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|     The reason to keep both https://lonamiwebs.github.io/Telethon and this
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|     documentation alive is that the former allows instant search results
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|     as you type, and a "Copy import" button. If you like namespaces, you
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|     can also do ``from telethon.tl import types, functions``. Both work.
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| 
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| 
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| .. important::
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| 
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|     All the examples in this documentation assume that you have
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|     ``from telethon import sync`` or ``import telethon.sync`` for the
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|     sake of simplicity and that you understand what it does (see
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|     :ref:`compatibility-and-convenience` for more). Simply add
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|     either line at the beginning of your project and it will work.
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| 
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| 
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| You should also refer to the documentation to see what the objects
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| (constructors) Telegram returns look like. Every constructor inherits
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| from a common type, and that's the reason for this distinction.
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| 
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| Say `client.send_message
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| <telethon.client.messages.MessageMethods.send_message>` didn't exist,
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| we could use the `search`__ to look for "message". There we would find
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| :tl:`SendMessageRequest`, which we can work with.
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| 
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| Every request is a Python class, and has the parameters needed for you
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| to invoke it. You can also call ``help(request)`` for information on
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| what input parameters it takes. Remember to "Copy import to the
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| clipboard", or your script won't be aware of this class! Now we have:
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| 
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| .. code-block:: python
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| 
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|     from telethon.tl.functions.messages import SendMessageRequest
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| 
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| If you're going to use a lot of these, you may do:
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| 
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| .. code-block:: python
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| 
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|     from telethon.tl import types, functions
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|     # We now have access to 'functions.messages.SendMessageRequest'
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| 
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| We see that this request must take at least two parameters, a ``peer``
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| of type :tl:`InputPeer`, and a ``message`` which is just a Python
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| ``str``\ ing.
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| 
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| How can we retrieve this :tl:`InputPeer`? We have two options. We manually
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| construct one, for instance:
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| 
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| .. code-block:: python
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| 
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|     from telethon.tl.types import InputPeerUser
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| 
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|     peer = InputPeerUser(user_id, user_hash)
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| 
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| Or we call `client.get_input_entity
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| <telethon.client.users.UserMethods.get_input_entity>`:
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| 
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| .. code-block:: python
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| 
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|     import telethon.sync
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|     peer = client.get_input_entity('someone')
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| 
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| 
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| When you're going to invoke an API method, most require you to pass an
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| :tl:`InputUser`, :tl:`InputChat`, or so on, this is why using
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| `client.get_input_entity <telethon.client.users.UserMethods.get_input_entity>`
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| is more straightforward (and often immediate, if you've seen the user before,
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| know their ID, etc.). If you also **need** to have information about the whole
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| user, use `client.get_entity <telethon.client.users.UserMethods.get_entity>`
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| instead:
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| 
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| .. code-block:: python
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| 
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|     entity = client.get_entity('someone')
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| 
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| In the later case, when you use the entity, the library will cast it to
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| its "input" version for you. If you already have the complete user and
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| want to cache its input version so the library doesn't have to do this
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| every time its used, simply call `telethon.utils.get_input_peer`:
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| 
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| .. code-block:: python
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| 
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|     from telethon import utils
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|     peer = utils.get_input_peer(entity)
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| 
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| 
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| .. note::
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| 
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|     Since ``v0.16.2`` this is further simplified. The ``Request`` itself
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|     will call `client.get_input_entity
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|     <telethon.client.users.UserMethods.get_input_entity>` for you when
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|     required, but it's good to remember what's happening.
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| 
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| After this small parenthesis about `client.get_entity
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| <telethon.client.users.UserMethods.get_entity>` versus
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| `client.get_input_entity <telethon.client.users.UserMethods.get_input_entity>`,
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| we have everything we need. To invoke our
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| request we do:
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| 
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| .. code-block:: python
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| 
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|     result = client(SendMessageRequest(peer, 'Hello there!'))
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| 
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| Message sent! Of course, this is only an example. There are over 250
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| methods available as of layer 80, and you can use every single of them
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| as you wish. Remember to use the right types! To sum up:
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| 
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| .. code-block:: python
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| 
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|     result = client(SendMessageRequest(
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|         client.get_input_entity('username'), 'Hello there!'
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|     ))
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| 
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| 
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| This can further be simplified to:
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| 
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| .. code-block:: python
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| 
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|     result = client(SendMessageRequest('username', 'Hello there!'))
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|     # Or even
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|     result = client(SendMessageRequest(PeerChannel(id), 'Hello there!'))
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| 
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| .. note::
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| 
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|     Note that some requests have a "hash" parameter. This is **not**
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|     your ``api_hash``! It likely isn't your self-user ``.access_hash`` either.
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| 
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|     It's a special hash used by Telegram to only send a difference of new data
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|     that you don't already have with that request, so you can leave it to 0,
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|     and it should work (which means no hash is known yet).
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| 
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|     For those requests having a "limit" parameter, you can often set it to
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|     zero to signify "return default amount". This won't work for all of them
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|     though, for instance, in "messages.search" it will actually return 0 items.
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| 
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| 
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| Requests in Parallel
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| ********************
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| 
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| The library will automatically merge outgoing requests into a single
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| *container*. Telegram's API supports sending multiple requests in a
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| single container, which is faster because it has less overhead and
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| the server can run them without waiting for others. You can also
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| force using a container manually:
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| 
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| .. code-block:: python
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| 
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|     async def main():
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| 
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|         # Letting the library do it behind the scenes
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|         await asyncio.wait([
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|             client.send_message('me', 'Hello'),
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|             client.send_message('me', ','),
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|             client.send_message('me', 'World'),
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|             client.send_message('me', '.')
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|         ])
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| 
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|         # Manually invoking many requests at once
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|         await client([
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|             SendMessageRequest('me', 'Hello'),
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|             SendMessageRequest('me', ', '),
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|             SendMessageRequest('me', 'World'),
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|             SendMessageRequest('me', '.')
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|         ])
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| 
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| Note that you cannot guarantee the order in which they are run.
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| Try running the above code more than one time. You will see the
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| order in which the messages arrive is different.
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| 
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| If you use the raw API (the first option), you can use ``ordered``
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| to tell the server that it should run the requests sequentially.
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| This will still be faster than going one by one, since the server
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| knows all requests directly:
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| 
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| .. code-block:: python
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| 
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|     client([
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|         SendMessageRequest('me', 'Hello'),
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|         SendMessageRequest('me', ', '),
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|         SendMessageRequest('me', 'World'),
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|         SendMessageRequest('me', '.')
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|     ], ordered=True)
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| 
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| If any of the requests fails with a Telegram error (not connection
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| errors or any other unexpected events), the library will raise
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| `telethon.errors.common.MultiError`. You can ``except`` this
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| and still access the successful results:
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| 
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| .. code-block:: python
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| 
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|     from telethon.errors import MultiError
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| 
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|     try:
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|         client([
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|             SendMessageRequest('me', 'Hello'),
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|             SendMessageRequest('me', ''),
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|             SendMessageRequest('me', 'World')
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|         ], ordered=True)
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|     except MultiError as e:
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|         # The first and third requests worked.
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|         first = e.results[0]
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|         third = e.results[2]
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|         # The second request failed.
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|         second = e.exceptions[1]
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| 
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| __ https://lonamiwebs.github.io/Telethon
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| __ https://lonamiwebs.github.io/Telethon/methods/index.html
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| __ https://lonamiwebs.github.io/Telethon/?q=message&redirect=no
 |