How I Created My Own Telegram Bot - Pt. 1

cover
20 Jun 2024

Hi there, my name is Alex Nekrashenko; you can think of me as a software architect or a full-stack developer. But actually, this article isn’t about it. It’s about how I created my own Telegram bot for the first time. I wanna share with you how I chose the stack and why I decided to write my own telegram API library with NestJs.


Let’s start this story now, yet it will be updated consistently, as this article will consist of several parts. Here, I will try to explain the basics of the structure and architecture as well as some other important things

How does Telegram Bot API work?

To clarify, the Telegram bot is just an API. Creating it is extremely simple. You just need to find the official Telegram bot with the funny name, BotFather, and set up your bot in it using the command.

After you’ve set your bot up, you will get a special key. Exactly this key is the one you will use in your future API, which will control all the conversations in bot chat.

Start working with NestJs

Let’s begin with creating a skeleton for our future application, the base functionality for the standard commands.

To make it easier, I just copy/paste commands from the official website NestJs documentation, just install CLI and execute the command

Project map

Well, almost all the work is done! Now, take a look at my project map

Project architect

It must be easy; you see two folders:

  • telegram - there is nothing special in this folder, I just thought that all existing libraries for the Telegram API with the NestJs weren’t so suitable for me because either they are very compilcated or irrelevant. And I decided to make my own, which may be released soon.
  • bot - a folder with exactly all the bot API functionality, like commands, botUpdates, utils etc…

What commands and botUpdates are you asking? Well, I’ll try to be concise, this is what we can find on the official Telegram API documentation here https://core.telegram.org/bots/api#getupdates

getUpdates telegram method


As you can see, Telegram will be reacting to every event related to your bot, and then it will make you aware of it with this method. Generally, we get all the info from Telegram using this method.

Getting back to my services in the bot folder



If we have one method, getUpdates from telegram, that’s what I thought about: I will define the special event that I need and implement it, and that’s exactly what I did. I defined the event in botUpdates, and if it is consistent with the command that I also defined myself, then I direct it to the commands folder and make the implementation there.

Database service


What about the database? I thought that I would need at least two tables: users and channels. But then I started thinking about userState table.


If everything is clear with users and channels, what is userState. UserState is a special table that can store the state when the user performs some action that isn’t related to a specific event.


Most events look like this, as a bot commands list.


bot commands list


Some events, such as "add words", require the user to enter words.



How can we understand that there is a chain of one event when an event has started and finished? That’s why I use this table to track the user actions.