Invoking Methods¶
At this point, we have successfully installed Pyrofork and authorized our account; we are now aiming towards the core of the framework.
Contents
Basic Usage¶
Making API calls with Pyrofork is very simple. Here’s a basic example we are going to examine step by step:
from pyrogram import Client
app = Client("my_account")
async def main():
async with app:
await app.send_message("me", "Hi!")
app.run(main())
Step-by-step¶
Let’s begin by importing the Client class.
from pyrogram import Client
Now instantiate a new Client object, “my_account” is a session name of your choice.
app = Client("my_account")
Async methods must be invoked within an async context. Here we define an async function and put our code inside. Also notice the
await
keyword in front of the method call; this is required for all asynchronous methods.async def main(): async with app: await app.send_message("me", "Hi!")
Finally, we tell Python to schedule our
main()
async function by using Pyrofork’srun()
method.app.run(main())
Context Manager¶
The async with
statement starts a context manager, which is used as a shortcut for starting, executing and stopping
the Client, asynchronously. It does so by automatically calling start()
and
stop()
in a more convenient way which also gracefully stops the client, even in case of
unhandled exceptions in your code.
Below there’s the same example as above, but without the use of the context manager:
from pyrogram import Client
app = Client("my_account")
async def main():
await app.start()
await app.send_message("me", "Hi!")
await app.stop()
app.run(main())
Using asyncio.run()¶
Alternatively to the run()
method, you can use Python’s asyncio.run()
to execute the main
function, with one little caveat: the Client instance (and possibly other asyncio resources you are going to use) must
be instantiated inside the main function.
import asyncio
from pyrogram import Client
async def main():
app = Client("my_account")
async with app:
await app.send_message("me", "Hi!")
asyncio.run(main())