ApplicationBuilder

class telegram.ext.ApplicationBuilder[source]

This class serves as initializer for telegram.ext.Application via the so called builder pattern. To build a telegram.ext.Application, one first initializes an instance of this class. Arguments for the telegram.ext.Application to build are then added by subsequently calling the methods of the builder. Finally, the telegram.ext.Application is built by calling build(). In the simplest case this can look like the following example.

Example

application = ApplicationBuilder().token("TOKEN").build()

Please see the description of the individual methods for information on which arguments can be set and what the defaults are when not called. When no default is mentioned, the argument will not be used by default.

Note

application_class(application_class, kwargs=None)[source]

Sets a custom subclass instead of telegram.ext.Application. The subclass’s __init__ should look like this

def __init__(self, custom_arg_1, custom_arg_2, ..., **kwargs):
    super().__init__(**kwargs)
    self.custom_arg_1 = custom_arg_1
    self.custom_arg_2 = custom_arg_2
Parameters:
Returns:

The same builder with the updated argument.

Return type:

ApplicationBuilder

arbitrary_callback_data(arbitrary_callback_data)[source]

Specifies whether telegram.ext.Application.bot should allow arbitrary objects as callback data for telegram.InlineKeyboardButton and how many keyboards should be cached in memory. If not called, only strings can be used as callback data and no data will be stored in memory.

Important

If you want to use this feature, you must install PTB with the optional requirement callback-data, i.e.

pip install "python-telegram-bot[callback-data]"
Parameters:

arbitrary_callback_data (bool | int) – If True is passed, the default cache size of 1024 will be used. Pass an integer to specify a different cache size.

Returns:

The same builder with the updated argument.

Return type:

ApplicationBuilder

base_file_url(base_file_url)[source]

Sets the base file URL for telegram.ext.Application.bot. If not called, will default to 'https://api.telegram.org/file/bot'.

Parameters:

base_file_url (str) – The URL.

Returns:

The same builder with the updated argument.

Return type:

ApplicationBuilder

base_url(base_url)[source]

Sets the base URL for telegram.ext.Application.bot. If not called, will default to 'https://api.telegram.org/bot'.

Parameters:

base_url (str) – The URL.

Returns:

The same builder with the updated argument.

Return type:

ApplicationBuilder

bot(bot)[source]

Sets a telegram.Bot instance for telegram.ext.Application.bot. Instances of subclasses like telegram.ext.ExtBot are also valid.

Parameters:

bot (telegram.Bot) – The bot.

Returns:

The same builder with the updated argument.

Return type:

ApplicationBuilder

build()[source]

Builds a telegram.ext.Application with the provided arguments.

Calls telegram.ext.JobQueue.set_application() and telegram.ext.BasePersistence.set_bot() if appropriate.

Returns:

telegram.ext.Application

concurrent_updates(concurrent_updates)[source]

Specifies if and how many updates may be processed concurrently instead of one by one. If not called, updates will be processed one by one.

Warning

Processing updates concurrently is not recommended when stateful handlers like telegram.ext.ConversationHandler are used. Only use this if you are sure that your bot does not (explicitly or implicitly) rely on updates being processed sequentially.

Tip

When making requests to the Bot API in an asynchronous fashion (e.g. via block=False, Application.create_task, concurrent_updates() or the JobQueue), it can happen that more requests are being made in parallel than there are connections in the pool. If the number of requests is much higher than the number of connections, even setting pool_timeout() to a larger value may not always be enough to prevent pool timeouts. You should therefore set concurrent_updates(), connection_pool_size() and pool_timeout() to values that make sense for your setup.

Parameters:

concurrent_updates (bool | int | BaseUpdateProcessor) –

Passing True will allow for 256 updates to be processed concurrently using telegram.ext.SimpleUpdateProcessor. Pass an integer to specify a different number of updates that may be processed concurrently. Pass an instance of telegram.ext.BaseUpdateProcessor to use that instance for handling updates concurrently.

Changed in version 20.4: Now accepts BaseUpdateProcessor instances.

Returns:

The same builder with the updated argument.

Return type:

ApplicationBuilder

connect_timeout(connect_timeout)[source]

Sets the connection attempt timeout for the connect_timeout parameter of telegram.Bot.request. Defaults to 5.0.

Parameters:

connect_timeout (float) – See telegram.request.HTTPXRequest.connect_timeout for more information.

Returns:

The same builder with the updated argument.

Return type:

ApplicationBuilder

connection_pool_size(connection_pool_size)[source]

Sets the size of the connection pool for the connection_pool_size parameter of telegram.Bot.request. Defaults to 256.

Tip

When making requests to the Bot API in an asynchronous fashion (e.g. via block=False, Application.create_task, concurrent_updates() or the JobQueue), it can happen that more requests are being made in parallel than there are connections in the pool. If the number of requests is much higher than the number of connections, even setting pool_timeout() to a larger value may not always be enough to prevent pool timeouts. You should therefore set concurrent_updates(), connection_pool_size() and pool_timeout() to values that make sense for your setup.

Parameters:

connection_pool_size (int) – The size of the connection pool.

Returns:

The same builder with the updated argument.

Return type:

ApplicationBuilder

context_types(context_types)[source]

Sets a telegram.ext.ContextTypes instance for telegram.ext.Application.context_types.

Parameters:

context_types (telegram.ext.ContextTypes) – The context types.

Returns:

The same builder with the updated argument.

Return type:

ApplicationBuilder

defaults(defaults)[source]

Sets the telegram.ext.Defaults instance for telegram.ext.Application.bot.

Parameters:

defaults (telegram.ext.Defaults) – The defaults instance.

Returns:

The same builder with the updated argument.

Return type:

ApplicationBuilder

get_updates_connect_timeout(get_updates_connect_timeout)[source]

Sets the connection attempt timeout for the telegram.request.HTTPXRequest.connect_timeout parameter which is used for the telegram.Bot.get_updates() request. Defaults to 5.0.

Parameters:

get_updates_connect_timeout (float) – See telegram.request.HTTPXRequest.connect_timeout for more information.

Returns:

The same builder with the updated argument.

Return type:

ApplicationBuilder

get_updates_connection_pool_size(get_updates_connection_pool_size)[source]

Sets the size of the connection pool for the telegram.request.HTTPXRequest.connection_pool_size parameter which is used for the telegram.Bot.get_updates() request. Defaults to 1.

Parameters:

get_updates_connection_pool_size (int) – The size of the connection pool.

Returns:

The same builder with the updated argument.

Return type:

ApplicationBuilder

get_updates_http_version(get_updates_http_version)[source]

Sets the HTTP protocol version which is used for the http_version parameter which is used in the telegram.Bot.get_updates() request. By default, HTTP/1.1 is used.

See also

http_version()

Note

Users have observed stability issues with HTTP/2, which happen due to how the h2 library handles cancellations of keepalive connections. See #3556 for a discussion.

You will also need to install the http2 dependency. Keep in mind that the HTTP/1.1 implementation may be considered the “more robust option at this time”.

pip install httpx[http2]

New in version 20.1.

Changed in version 20.2: Reset the default version to 1.1.

Parameters:

get_updates_http_version (str) –

Pass "2" or "2.0" if you’d like to use HTTP/2 for making requests to Telegram. Defaults to "1.1", in which case HTTP/1.1 is used.

Changed in version 20.5: Accept "2" as a valid value.

Returns:

The same builder with the updated argument.

Return type:

ApplicationBuilder

get_updates_pool_timeout(get_updates_pool_timeout)[source]

Sets the connection pool’s connection freeing timeout for the pool_timeout parameter which is used for the telegram.Bot.get_updates() request. Defaults to 1.0.

See also

pool_timeout()

Parameters:

get_updates_pool_timeout (float) – See telegram.request.HTTPXRequest.pool_timeout for more information.

Returns:

The same builder with the updated argument.

Return type:

ApplicationBuilder

get_updates_proxy(get_updates_proxy)[source]

Sets the proxy for the telegram.request.HTTPXRequest.proxy parameter which is used for telegram.Bot.get_updates(). Defaults to None.

See also

proxy()

New in version 20.7.

Parameters:

proxy (str | httpx.Proxy | httpx.URL) – The URL to a proxy server, a httpx.Proxy object or a httpx.URL object. See telegram.request.HTTPXRequest.proxy for more information.

Returns:

The same builder with the updated argument.

Return type:

ApplicationBuilder

get_updates_proxy_url(get_updates_proxy_url)[source]

Legacy name for get_updates_proxy(), kept for backward compatibility.

See also

proxy()

Deprecated since version 20.7.

Parameters:

get_updates_proxy_url (str | httpx.Proxy | httpx.URL) – See telegram.ext.ApplicationBuilder.get_updates_proxy.get_updates_proxy.

Returns:

The same builder with the updated argument.

Return type:

ApplicationBuilder

get_updates_read_timeout(get_updates_read_timeout)[source]

Sets the waiting timeout for the telegram.request.HTTPXRequest.read_timeout parameter which is used for the telegram.Bot.get_updates() request. Defaults to 5.0.

See also

read_timeout()

Parameters:

get_updates_read_timeout (float) – See telegram.request.HTTPXRequest.read_timeout for more information.

Returns:

The same builder with the updated argument.

Return type:

ApplicationBuilder

get_updates_request(get_updates_request)[source]

Sets a telegram.request.BaseRequest instance for the get_updates_request parameter of telegram.ext.Application.bot.

See also

request()

Parameters:

get_updates_request (telegram.request.BaseRequest) – The request instance.

Returns:

The same builder with the updated argument.

Return type:

ApplicationBuilder

get_updates_socket_options(get_updates_socket_options)[source]

Sets the options for the socket_options parameter of telegram.Bot.get_updates_request. Defaults to None.

See also

socket_options()

New in version 20.7.

Parameters:

get_updates_socket_options (Collection[tuple], optional) – Socket options. See telegram.request.HTTPXRequest.socket_options for more information.

Returns:

The same builder with the updated argument.

Return type:

ApplicationBuilder

get_updates_write_timeout(get_updates_write_timeout)[source]

Sets the write operation timeout for the telegram.request.HTTPXRequest.write_timeout parameter which is used for the telegram.Bot.get_updates() request. Defaults to 5.0.

See also

write_timeout()

Parameters:

get_updates_write_timeout (float) – See telegram.request.HTTPXRequest.write_timeout for more information.

Returns:

The same builder with the updated argument.

Return type:

ApplicationBuilder

http_version(http_version)[source]

Sets the HTTP protocol version which is used for the http_version parameter of telegram.Bot.request. By default, HTTP/1.1 is used.

Note

Users have observed stability issues with HTTP/2, which happen due to how the h2 library handles cancellations of keepalive connections. See #3556 for a discussion.

If you want to use HTTP/2, you must install PTB with the optional requirement http2, i.e.

pip install "python-telegram-bot[http2]"

Keep in mind that the HTTP/1.1 implementation may be considered the “more robust option at this time”.

New in version 20.1.

Changed in version 20.2: Reset the default version to 1.1.

Parameters:

http_version (str) –

Pass "2" or "2.0" if you’d like to use HTTP/2 for making requests to Telegram. Defaults to "1.1", in which case HTTP/1.1 is used.

Changed in version 20.5: Accept "2" as a valid value.

Returns:

The same builder with the updated argument.

Return type:

ApplicationBuilder

job_queue(job_queue)[source]

Sets a telegram.ext.JobQueue instance for telegram.ext.Application.job_queue. If not called, a job queue will be instantiated if the requirements of telegram.ext.JobQueue are installed.

Examples

Timer Bot

See also

Job Queue

Note

Parameters:

job_queue (telegram.ext.JobQueue) – The job queue. Pass None if you don’t want to use a job queue.

Returns:

The same builder with the updated argument.

Return type:

ApplicationBuilder

local_mode(local_mode)[source]

Specifies the value for local_mode for the telegram.ext.Application.bot. If not called, will default to False.

Parameters:

local_mode (bool) – Whether the bot should run in local mode.

Returns:

The same builder with the updated argument.

Return type:

ApplicationBuilder

media_write_timeout(media_write_timeout)[source]

Sets the media write operation timeout for the media_write_timeout parameter of telegram.Bot.request. Defaults to 20.

New in version 21.0.

Parameters:

media_write_timeout (float) – See telegram.request.HTTPXRequest.media_write_timeout for more information.

Returns:

The same builder with the updated argument.

Return type:

ApplicationBuilder

persistence(persistence)[source]

Sets a telegram.ext.BasePersistence instance for telegram.ext.Application.persistence.

Note

When using a persistence, note that all data stored in context.user_data, context.chat_data, context.bot_data and in telegram.ext.ExtBot.callback_data_cache must be copyable with copy.deepcopy(). This is due to the data being deep copied before handing it over to the persistence in order to avoid race conditions.

Warning

If a telegram.ext.ContextTypes instance is set via context_types(), the persistence instance must use the same types!

Parameters:

persistence (telegram.ext.BasePersistence) – The persistence instance.

Returns:

The same builder with the updated argument.

Return type:

ApplicationBuilder

pool_timeout(pool_timeout)[source]

Sets the connection pool’s connection freeing timeout for the pool_timeout parameter of telegram.Bot.request. Defaults to 1.0.

Tip

When making requests to the Bot API in an asynchronous fashion (e.g. via block=False, Application.create_task, concurrent_updates() or the JobQueue), it can happen that more requests are being made in parallel than there are connections in the pool. If the number of requests is much higher than the number of connections, even setting pool_timeout() to a larger value may not always be enough to prevent pool timeouts. You should therefore set concurrent_updates(), connection_pool_size() and pool_timeout() to values that make sense for your setup.

Parameters:

pool_timeout (float) – See telegram.request.HTTPXRequest.pool_timeout for more information.

Returns:

The same builder with the updated argument.

Return type:

ApplicationBuilder

post_init(post_init)[source]

Sets a callback to be executed by Application.run_polling() and Application.run_webhook() after executing Application.initialize() but before executing Updater.start_polling() or Updater.start_webhook(), respectively.

Tip

This can be used for custom startup logic that requires to await coroutines, e.g. setting up the bots commands via set_my_commands().

Example

async def post_init(application: Application) -> None:
    await application.bot.set_my_commands([('start', 'Starts the bot')])

application = Application.builder().token("TOKEN").post_init(post_init).build()

Note

If you implement custom logic that implies that you will not be using Application’s methods run_polling() or run_webhook() to run your application (like it’s done in Custom Webhook Bot Example), the callback you set in this method will not be called automatically. So instead of setting a callback with this method, you have to explicitly await the function that you want to run at this stage of your application’s life (in the example mentioned above, that would be in async with application context manager).

Parameters:

post_init (coroutine function) –

The custom callback. Must be a coroutine function and must accept exactly one positional argument, which is the Application:

async def post_init(application: Application) -> None:

Returns:

The same builder with the updated argument.

Return type:

ApplicationBuilder

post_shutdown(post_shutdown)[source]

Sets a callback to be executed by Application.run_polling() and Application.run_webhook() after executing Updater.shutdown() and Application.shutdown().

Tip

This can be used for custom shutdown logic that requires to await coroutines, e.g. closing a database connection

Example

async def post_shutdown(application: Application) -> None:
    await application.bot_data['database'].close()

application = Application.builder()
                        .token("TOKEN")
                        .post_shutdown(post_shutdown)
                        .build()

Note

If you implement custom logic that implies that you will not be using Application’s methods run_polling() or run_webhook() to run your application (like it’s done in Custom Webhook Bot Example), the callback you set in this method will not be called automatically. So instead of setting a callback with this method, you have to explicitly await the function that you want to run at this stage of your application’s life (in the example mentioned above, that would be in async with application context manager).

Parameters:

post_shutdown (coroutine function) –

The custom callback. Must be a coroutine function and must accept exactly one positional argument, which is the Application:

async def post_shutdown(application: Application) -> None:

Returns:

The same builder with the updated argument.

Return type:

ApplicationBuilder

post_stop(post_stop)[source]

Sets a callback to be executed by Application.run_polling() and Application.run_webhook() after executing Updater.stop() and Application.stop().

New in version 20.1.

Tip

This can be used for custom stop logic that requires to await coroutines, e.g. sending message to a chat before shutting down the bot

Example

async def post_stop(application: Application) -> None:
    await application.bot.send_message(123456, "Shutting down...")

application = Application.builder()
                        .token("TOKEN")
                        .post_stop(post_stop)
                        .build()

Note

If you implement custom logic that implies that you will not be using Application’s methods run_polling() or run_webhook() to run your application (like it’s done in Custom Webhook Bot Example), the callback you set in this method will not be called automatically. So instead of setting a callback with this method, you have to explicitly await the function that you want to run at this stage of your application’s life (in the example mentioned above, that would be in async with application context manager).

Parameters:

post_stop (coroutine function) –

The custom callback. Must be a coroutine function and must accept exactly one positional argument, which is the Application:

async def post_stop(application: Application) -> None:

Returns:

The same builder with the updated argument.

Return type:

ApplicationBuilder

private_key(private_key, password=None)[source]

Sets the private key and corresponding password for decryption of telegram passport data for telegram.ext.Application.bot.

Examples

Passport Bot

Parameters:
  • private_key (bytes | str | pathlib.Path) – The private key or the file path of a file that contains the key. In the latter case, the file’s content will be read automatically.

  • password (bytes | str | pathlib.Path, optional) – The corresponding password or the file path of a file that contains the password. In the latter case, the file’s content will be read automatically.

Returns:

The same builder with the updated argument.

Return type:

ApplicationBuilder

proxy(proxy)[source]

Sets the proxy for the proxy parameter of telegram.Bot.request. Defaults to None.

New in version 20.7.

Parameters:

proxy (str | httpx.Proxy | httpx.URL) – The URL to a proxy server, a httpx.Proxy object or a httpx.URL object. See telegram.request.HTTPXRequest.proxy for more information.

Returns:

The same builder with the updated argument.

Return type:

ApplicationBuilder

proxy_url(proxy_url)[source]

Legacy name for proxy(), kept for backward compatibility.

Deprecated since version 20.7.

Parameters:

proxy_url (str | httpx.Proxy | httpx.URL) – See telegram.ext.ApplicationBuilder.proxy.proxy.

Returns:

The same builder with the updated argument.

Return type:

ApplicationBuilder

rate_limiter(rate_limiter)[source]

Sets a telegram.ext.BaseRateLimiter instance for the telegram.ext.ExtBot.rate_limiter parameter of telegram.ext.Application.bot.

Parameters:

rate_limiter (telegram.ext.BaseRateLimiter) – The rate limiter.

Returns:

The same builder with the updated argument.

Return type:

ApplicationBuilder

read_timeout(read_timeout)[source]

Sets the waiting timeout for the read_timeout parameter of telegram.Bot.request. Defaults to 5.0.

Parameters:

read_timeout (float) – See telegram.request.HTTPXRequest.read_timeout for more information.

Returns:

The same builder with the updated argument.

Return type:

ApplicationBuilder

request(request)[source]

Sets a telegram.request.BaseRequest instance for the telegram.Bot.request parameter of telegram.ext.Application.bot.

Parameters:

request (telegram.request.BaseRequest) – The request instance.

Returns:

The same builder with the updated argument.

Return type:

ApplicationBuilder

socket_options(socket_options)[source]

Sets the options for the socket_options parameter of telegram.Bot.request. Defaults to None.

New in version 20.7.

Parameters:

socket_options (Collection[tuple], optional) – Socket options. See telegram.request.HTTPXRequest.socket_options for more information.

Returns:

The same builder with the updated argument.

Return type:

ApplicationBuilder

token(token)[source]

Sets the token for telegram.ext.Application.bot.

Parameters:

token (str) – The token.

Returns:

The same builder with the updated argument.

Return type:

ApplicationBuilder

update_queue(update_queue)[source]

Sets a asyncio.Queue instance for telegram.ext.Application.update_queue, i.e. the queue that the application will fetch updates from. Will also be used for the telegram.ext.Application.updater. If not called, a queue will be instantiated.

Parameters:

update_queue (asyncio.Queue) – The queue.

Returns:

The same builder with the updated argument.

Return type:

ApplicationBuilder

updater(updater)[source]

Sets a telegram.ext.Updater instance for telegram.ext.Application.updater. The telegram.ext.Updater.bot and telegram.ext.Updater.update_queue will be used for telegram.ext.Application.bot and telegram.ext.Application.update_queue, respectively.

Parameters:

updater (telegram.ext.Updater | None) – The updater instance or None if no updater should be used.

Returns:

The same builder with the updated argument.

Return type:

ApplicationBuilder

write_timeout(write_timeout)[source]

Sets the write operation timeout for the write_timeout parameter of telegram.Bot.request. Defaults to 5.0.

Parameters:

write_timeout (float) – See telegram.request.HTTPXRequest.write_timeout for more information.

Returns:

The same builder with the updated argument.

Return type:

ApplicationBuilder