Ruby bindings of ChatWork API
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'chatwork'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install chatwork
chatwork
gem provides class method APIs and instance method APIs
At first, set ChatWork.api_key
or ChatWork.access_token
.
ChatWork.api_key = "XXX"
# or
ChatWork.access_token = "XXX"
Another way, you can use ENV["CHATWORK_API_TOKEN"]
or ENV["CHATWORK_ACCESS_TOKEN"]
instead of ChatWork.api_key
or ChatWork.access_token
.
Then call class methods.
e.g. post message.
ChatWork::Message.create(room_id: 1234, body: "Hello, ChatWork!")
#=> #<Hashie::Mash message_id="1234567890">
All available APIs are followings.
- ChatWork::Contacts
- ChatWork::File
- ChatWork::IncomingRequest
- ChatWork::InvitationLink
- ChatWork::Me
- ChatWork::Member
- ChatWork::Message
- ChatWork::MyStatus
- ChatWork::MyTask
- ChatWork::Room
- ChatWork::Task
When you want to refresh access token, call ChatWork::Token.refresh_access_token
.
ChatWork.client_id = "XXX"
ChatWork.client_secret = "XXX"
refresh_token = "XXX"
token = ChatWork::Token.refresh_access_token(refresh_token)
new_access_token = token["access_token"]
# Create message
ChatWork.access_token = new_access_token
ChatWork::Message.create(room_id: 1234, body: "Hello, ChatWork!")
Another way, you can use ENV["CHATWORK_CLIENT_ID"]
or ENV["CHATWORK_CLIENT_SECRET"]
instead of ChatWork.api_key
or ChatWork.access_token
.
client = ChatWork::Client.new(api_key: "XXX")
#or
client = ChatWork::Client.new(access_token: "XXX")
Then call instance methods.
e.g. post message.
client.create_message(room_id: 1234, body: "Hello, ChatWork!")
#=> #<Hashie::Mash message_id="1234567890">
All available APIs are followings.
http://www.rubydoc.info/gems/chatwork/ChatWork/Client
When you want to refresh access token, call ChatWork::OAuthClient#refresh_access_token
.
refresh_token = "XXX"
oauth_client = ChatWork::OAuthClient.new(client_id: "xxx", client_secret: "xxx")
token = oauth_client.refresh_access_token(refresh_token)
new_access_token = token["access_token"]
# Create message
client = ChatWork::Client.new(access_token: new_access_token)
client.create_message(room_id: 1234, body: "Hello, ChatWork!")
Class method APIs are simple, but not threadsafe. Instance method APIs are threadsafe.
If you are using multiple api_key
or access_token
in an app and using multithreaded server (e.g. puma), we recommend instance method APIs.
All API methods returns Hashie::Mash
instance.
https://github.com/intridea/hashie#mash
Hashie::Mash
is very useful!
body = ChatWork::Message.create(room_id: 1234, body: "Hello, ChatWork!")
#=> #<Hashie::Mash message_id="1234567890">
body["message_id"]
#=> "1234567890"
body[:message_id]
#=> "1234567890"
body.message_id
#=> "1234567890"
All API methods supports block argument.
If block was given, return response body and response header through block arguments.
ChatWork::Message.create(room_id: 1234, body: "Hello, ChatWork!") do |body, header|
body
#=> #<Hashie::Mash message_id="1234567890">
header["X-RateLimit-Limit"]
#=> "100"
header["X-RateLimit-Remaining"]
#=> "0"
header["X-RateLimit-Reset"]
#=> "1390941626"
end
client.create_message(room_id: 1234, body: "Hello, ChatWork!") do |body, header|
body
#=> #<Hashie::Mash message_id="1234567890">
header["X-RateLimit-Limit"]
#=> "100"
header["X-RateLimit-Remaining"]
#=> "0"
header["X-RateLimit-Reset"]
#=> "1390941626"
end
http://www.rubydoc.info/gems/chatwork
cp .env.example .env
vi .env
./bin/console
- Fork it
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Add some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create new Pull Request