SendBotRequestedPeer
---functions--- messages.sendBotRequestedPeer#6c5cf2a7 peer:InputPeer msg_id:flags.0?int webapp_req_id:flags.1?string button_id:int requested_peers:Vector<InputPeer> = Updates
Returns
| Updates |
Parameters
| peer | InputPeer | required |
| msg_id | int | optional |
| webapp_req_id | string | optional |
| button_id | int | required |
| requested_peers | Vector<InputPeer> | required |
Example
The examples below use placeholder values. Replace them with real data before running the code.
▶ Minimal
import asyncio
from ferogram import Client
app = Client("my_session", api_id=12345, api_hash="0123456789abcdef0123456789abcdef")
async def main():
await app.start()
result = await app.raw.messages.SendBotRequestedPeer(
peer='username',
button_id=42,
requested_peers=['username']
)
print(result)
asyncio.run(main())
The minimal example uses Ferogram's raw proxy shorthand. Peers can be passed as strings and required primitives get safe defaults. Expand Full API to see every parameter.
▶ Full API
import asyncio
from ferogram import Client, raw
app = Client("my_session", api_id=12345, api_hash="0123456789abcdef0123456789abcdef")
async def main():
await app.start()
result = await app(raw.functions.messages.SendBotRequestedPeer(
peer=raw.types.InputPeerSelf(),
msg_id=42,
webapp_req_id='some string here',
button_id=42,
requested_peers=[raw.types.InputPeerSelf()]
))
print(result)
asyncio.run(main())