* Add initial implementation for automoderator api
* Move AutoModerationRuleID to snowflake.go and go generate
* Combine a struct and document all the things
* Add audit log reasons to modify and delete in automoderation
* Update docstrings and change how data is passed in
* Rename plurals to singulars and update data stuff
* fixup
* Update to use optional
* Move params out of data
* fixup and add types
* Add Tag and TagID for forum capabilities
* set correct json flags
* Fix up naming and minor fixes
Co-authored-by: diamondburned <diamond@arikawa-hi.me>
* implement the gateway side of guild scheduled event
* Add proper punctuation to each docstring
* Fix UserAdd and UserRemove events
* Add MANAGE_EVENTS permission
* Implement the API-side of scheduled events
* Add ScheduledEvent method
* Cleanup
This commit refactors the whole package gateway as well as utils/ws
(formerly utils/wsutil) and voice/voicegateway. The new refactor
utilizes a design pattern involving a concurrent loop and an arriving
event channel.
An additional change was made to the way gateway events are typed.
Before, pretty much any type will satisfy a gateway event type, since
the actual type was just interface{}. The new refactor defines a
concrete interface that events can implement:
type Event interface {
Op() OpCode
EventType() EventType
}
Using this interface, the user can easily add custom gateway events
independently of the library without relying on string maps. This adds a
lot of type safety into the library and makes type-switching on Event
types much more reasonable.
Gateway error callbacks are also almost entirely removed in favor of
custom gateway events. A catch-all can easily be added like this:
s.AddHandler(func(err error) {
log.Println("gateway error:, err")
})
This commit gets rid of contain-it-all structs and instead opt for
interface union types containing underlying concrete types with no
overloading.
The code is much more verbose by doing this, but the API is much nicer
to use. The only disadvantage in that regard is the interface assertion
being too verbose and risky for users at times.