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Is this repo really legacy, there is still a use case? #279

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merefield opened this issue Dec 9, 2021 · 3 comments
Open

Is this repo really legacy, there is still a use case? #279

merefield opened this issue Dec 9, 2021 · 3 comments

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@merefield
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merefield commented Dec 9, 2021

Hey @dblock, thanks for all you've done here.

According to Slack (https://api.slack.com/changelog/2021-10-rtm-start-to-stop), the rtm.connect method will still be supported past September 2022?

Indeed if I set that method of connecting as default to a new 'classic' bot, slack-ruby-bot seems to work really well.

The scope of this repo and framework fits my needs better as I don' t need a standalone webserver and a separate db, I can just add it to my existing Rails app (which is intentional as I'm trying to integrate its data with Slack), avoiding a lot of complexity & duplication. So, are we calling time on this repo too early?

Might it make sense to build a back-end-less bot framework on the newer api methods?

Apologies, I'm new to the Slack space and your repos, I'm probably missing some nuances and issues with that approach.

@dblock
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dblock commented Dec 11, 2021

IMO anything on a deprecation path should not be used for anything new. I think something more specific to Rails and that is compatible with https://github.com/slack-ruby/slack-ruby-bot-server-events might make more sense?

@merefield
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merefield commented Dec 11, 2021

What does that optimally look like? What's the most efficient way to get there?

@dblock
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dblock commented Dec 12, 2021

What does that optimally look like? What's the most efficient way to get there?

I think it's a fork of https://github.com/slack-ruby/slack-ruby-bot-server-events that takes a Rails dependency instead of slack-ruby-bot-server.

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