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Rachel Ombok
Rachel Ombok

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Build a Discord Bot ๐Ÿ‘พ

This tutorial is apart of a workshop I hosted for Starhacks ๐Ÿ’ซ Watch the full video tutorial here.

Discord is a powerful messaging platform with great chat capabilities originally
built to serve gaming communities. it has grown to a massive popularity and offers
a lot of customization and autonomy via bots, custom moderation tools and more,
which Iโ€™ll show you how to work with! in this tutorial Iโ€™ll show you how to set
up a fully customizable Discord bot that can be running on your server in under
15 minutes. this tutorial is taught using Javascript, but if you are a beginner
donโ€™t worry! Weโ€™ll walk through it together.

i set this repository up so that anyone can fork or clone it and add their own tokens
and capabilities for their own bot easily, so if you don't want to start from scratch,
fork this repo!

Prerequisites

1.) Creating the Discord bot

  • Visit the Discord portal and click on new application
  • Give your application a unique name and click the Create button
  • On the left panel, click on the Bot tab and click on Add Bot
  • Now our bot is created and we can invite it to our server!

2.) Adding the bot to your server

  • On the left panel, navigate to the OAuth2 panel and select the bot you just created
  • Select the needed permissions for your bot (Read Messages/View Channels, Send Messages, Manage Messages, etc.)
  • Copy the generated URL link and paste it into your browser
  • After pasting it we can add it to our server by selecting it and clicking the authorize button

3.) Creating our Project

  • We can create our project directory from the terminal and start coding it! mkdir my-bot && cd my-bot
  • Then create the two files that we will work with touch index.js && touch config.json
  • run npm init and fill out the questions, this will help us keep track of our project information
  • Now open your project in your preferred IDE

4.) DiscordJS basics

  • Install these dependencies npm install discord.js @discordjs/opus --save
  • Fill our config.json file with your command prefix and your bot token. To get the token go back to the Discord portal and copy it from the bot section
{
"prefix": "!",
"token": "your-token"
}
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  • In our index.js file we need to import all our dependencies we installed for our app
const Discord = require('discord.js');
const {
    prefix,
    token,
} = require('./config.json');
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  • After that we create our client (bot object) and login using our token
const { Client, Intents, MessageEmbed } = require('discord.js');
const client = new Client({ intents: [Intents.FLAGS.GUILDS, Intents.FLAGS.GUILD_MESSAGES] });
client.login(token);
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  • Add some basic listeners to your bot that will console.log when executed
client.once('ready', () => {
    console.log('Ready!');
});
client.once('reconnecting', () => {
    console.log('Reconnecting!');
});
client.once('disconnect', () => {
    console.log('Disconnect!');
});
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  • Test your bot by running node index.js in your terminal, which should output a 'Ready!' message

5.) Reading and Writing Message Commands

  • Now that our bot can go online, we can start by giving it the functionality to read chat messages, an event listener, by writing one simple function:
client.on('messageCreate', async message => {

}
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  • Check if the message is from our own bot, or if the message doesn't start with our specified prefix. In these cases, we just return and don't do anything
if (message.author.bot) return;
if (!message.content.startsWith(prefix)) return;
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  • Afterwards we can add capabilities for messaging to our bot with some conditional statements
if (message.content.startsWith(`${prefix}name`)){
    message.reply(`Your name is ${message.author.username}`); // sends reply in channel to author
    return;
} else if (message.content.startsWith(`${prefix}greeting`)){
    message.channel.send("Hello world!"); // sends general message to channel
    return;
} else if (message.content.startsWith(`${prefix}secret`)){
    message.author.send("Shhh! This is a secret message for you"); // sends direct message to author
    return;
} else if (message.content.startsWith(`${prefix}quote`)){
    const quoteEmbed = new MessageEmbed().setColor("ORANGE").setTitle(`Quote for ${message.author.username}`).setURL("https://discord.js.org/#/docs/discord.js/stable/class/Client").setDescription("To be, or not to be. That is the question.")
    message.channel.send({embeds: [quoteEmbed]}); // sends embedded message to channel
    return;
} else {
    message.channel.send("You need to enter a valid command!"); // if invalid command, send this error message to the channel
}
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6.) Run Locally ๐Ÿ“ก

  • to start your bot, run node index.js, you should see the console message 'Ready' if it is up and running.
  • type your commands in the channel where the bot has been invited, and make sure the bot behaves as your programmed it to

7.) Pushing to your repository

If you push your repo as is, your secret bot token will be exposed publicly will cause Discord to flag you down and your token will no longer work. To make sure your token stays secure, we need to tell our project to ignore when pushing to our repository. We will also include the node_modules folder since that is also not needed for pushing our project

  • Create an environment file to host your variables touch .env, and then add this code block to the file:
TOKEN='your-bot-token'
PREFIX='your-prefix'
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  • Create a gitignore file touch .gitignore
  • install the dotenv dependency\ npm install dotenv
  • Since your .env file was created before the .gitignore, it is not yet tracking the file. To do so, untrack the cached files with the two commands:\ git rm --cached .env and git rm --cached node_modules
  • if you've already committed these files and are given an error, try adding -r to the command:\ git rm -r --cached .env and git rm -r --cached node_modules
  • now if you run git status in your terminal, it will show all the files that are untracked in your project
  • in index.js, add require('dotenv').config(); to the top of the file
  • instead of importing the config variables from config.json we can now use the .env file variables by using: process.env.TOKEN and process.env.PREFIX
  • if you are working on a team, you can add the environment variables by going to the Settings tab in your repository, navigating to Environments, and clicking the New Environments button to add the variable secrets
  • You can now host your bot on an external service, tutorial links and resources are listed below.

Other Resources

Conclusion

if you have any questions or feedback, let me know by messaging me in Discord! (racheletc#1212)

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