twitch_irc
Twitch chat client for Deno
import { TwitchIrcClient, Message } from "https://deno.land/x/twitch_irc/mod.ts";
const channel = /*...*/;
const use = (message: Message) => {/*...*/};
const client = new TwitchIrcClient();
client.on("open", () => {
client.join(channel);
});
client.on("message", (message) => {
use(message);
});
Features
- Connection management
- Authentication
- Automatic reconnect
- Automatic keep-alive
- Correct message parsing[^1]
- Same message bypass for
PRIVMSG
- Auto-complete tag names
- Latency measurement
- Strong type safety[^2]
[^1]: Some tag values can have a space in them, and the example parser by Twitch will not correctly handle that case.
[^2]: The library uses string and template literal types extensively, for example to ensure that a channel has the #
prefix - similar usage of these advanced type features simplifies the internals of the library greatly, and contributes towards making it less error prone to use.
Examples
Specify the --inspect-brk
flag to inspect any of the examples using developer tools.
For example, for Chrome it's chrome://inspect
-> Open dedicated DevTools for Node
.
The client is available on the window object as window.client
.
Simple chat logging (anonymous)
Requires the CHANNEL
environment variable to be specified in the format #<name>
, e.g. #jtv
.
$ deno run \
--allow-env=CHANNEL \
--allow-net=irc-ws.chat.twitch.tv \
https://deno.land/x/twitch_irc/examples/logs.ts
Simple bot
Requires three environment variables:
CHANNEL
in the format#<name>
, e.g.#jtv
.TOKEN
in the formatoauth:<token>
, e.g.oauth:abcdefg0123456789
. You can generate one here.LOGIN
, which is the username of the account you used to generateTOKEN
.
The bot will join CHANNEL
upon connecting, and you can type !ping
in command to have it respond to you. It will also join its own channel.
$ deno run \
--allow-env=CHANNEL,LOGIN,TOKEN \
--allow-net=irc-ws.chat.twitch.tv \
https://deno.land/x/twitch_irc/examples/bot.ts