This folder contains various simple, self-contained examples that you can use to base your projects on. If you would like to see any other example that could be useful for others, or you think these could be improved, feel free to contribute.
For the time being, the examples are licensed in the same way as the libraries.
Pings Telegram by using raw API. This is the simplest possible example, and requires no valid API ID or hash, since it's not logging in to any account.
Simple echo-bot. It will respond to plain text messages with the same content. The updates will be processed concurrently to showcase how one might use multiple handles the same time. In a real-world scenario, you would probably want to use some form of task pool to spawn tasks within limits. Or you might not need this at all if you want to process updates in order.
Logs in to a user account and prints the title and ID of all the dialogs (chats they have joined to and private conversations). It shows how to spawn a task to handle the network in the background and using a single client handle to actually perform remote calls. If the client was not running and thus not handling the network, no response would ever arrive to the handles!
This separation between client, which deals with all network events, and client handles, enables you to have as many handles as you need, for as many tasks as you need (and enabling things like iterators which keep their own handle). It requires some boilerplate to setup, but it's a very powerful approach.
Downloads all media from a chat, including files located in datacenters different than your own.
After logging in, the example iterates all messages of the supplied chat name, printing in the console
the ID and the text for each one; videos, images, stickers and contacts are saved in the target
folder.