API Reference

The following section outlines the API of nextcord’s command extension module.

Bots

Bot

Methods
class nextcord.ext.commands.Bot(command_prefix=(), help_command=..., description=None, *, max_messages=1000, connector=None, proxy=None, proxy_auth=None, shard_id=None, shard_count=None, application_id=None, intents=<Intents value=3243773>, member_cache_flags=..., chunk_guilds_at_startup=..., status=None, activity=None, allowed_mentions=None, heartbeat_timeout=60.0, guild_ready_timeout=2.0, assume_unsync_clock=True, enable_debug_events=False, loop=None, lazy_load_commands=True, rollout_associate_known=True, rollout_delete_unknown=True, rollout_register_new=True, rollout_update_known=True, rollout_all_guilds=False, default_guild_ids=None, owner_id=None, owner_ids=None, strip_after_prefix=False, case_insensitive=False)

Represents a discord bot.

This class is a subclass of nextcord.Client and as a result anything that you can do with a nextcord.Client you can do with this bot.

This class also subclasses GroupMixin to provide the functionality to manage commands.

command_prefix

The command prefix is what the message content must contain initially to have a command invoked. This prefix could either be a string to indicate what the prefix should be, or a callable that takes in the bot as its first parameter and nextcord.Message as its second parameter and returns the prefix. This is to facilitate “dynamic” command prefixes. This callable can be either a regular function or a coroutine.

An empty string as the prefix always matches, enabling prefix-less command invocation. While this may be useful in DMs it should be avoided in servers, as it’s likely to cause performance issues and unintended command invocations.

The command prefix could also be an iterable of strings indicating that multiple checks for the prefix should be used and the first one to match will be the invocation prefix. You can get this prefix via Context.prefix.

Note

When passing multiple prefixes be careful to not pass a prefix that matches a longer prefix occurring later in the sequence. For example, if the command prefix is ('!', '!?') the '!?' prefix will never be matched to any message as the previous one matches messages starting with !?. This is especially important when passing an empty string, it should always be last as no prefix after it will be matched.

case_insensitive

Whether the commands should be case insensitive. Defaults to False. This attribute does not carry over to groups. You must set it to every group if you require group commands to be case insensitive as well.

Type:

bool

description

The content prefixed into the default help message.

Type:

str

help_command

The help command implementation to use. This can be dynamically set at runtime. To remove the help command pass None. For more information on implementing a help command, see Help Commands.

Type:

Optional[HelpCommand]

owner_id

The user ID that owns the bot. If this is not set and is then queried via is_owner() then it is fetched automatically using application_info().

Type:

Optional[int]

owner_ids

The user IDs that owns the bot. This is similar to owner_id. If this is not set and the application is team based, then it is fetched automatically using application_info(). For performance reasons it is recommended to use a set for the collection. You cannot set both owner_id and owner_ids.

New in version 1.3.

Type:

Optional[Collection[int]]

strip_after_prefix

Whether to strip whitespace characters after encountering the command prefix. This allows for !   hello and !hello to both work if the command_prefix is set to !. Defaults to False.

New in version 1.7.

Type:

bool

@after_invoke

A decorator that registers a coroutine as a post-invoke hook.

A post-invoke hook is called directly after the command is called. This makes it a useful function to clean-up database connections or any type of clean up required.

This post-invoke hook takes a sole parameter, a Context.

Note

Similar to before_invoke(), this is not called unless checks and argument parsing procedures succeed. This hook is, however, always called regardless of the internal command callback raising an error (i.e. CommandInvokeError). This makes it ideal for clean-up scenarios.

Parameters:

coro (coroutine) – The coroutine to register as the post-invoke hook.

Raises:

TypeError – The coroutine passed is not actually a coroutine.

@before_invoke

A decorator that registers a coroutine as a pre-invoke hook.

A pre-invoke hook is called directly before the command is called. This makes it a useful function to set up database connections or any type of set up required.

This pre-invoke hook takes a sole parameter, a Context.

Note

The before_invoke() and after_invoke() hooks are only called if all checks and argument parsing procedures pass without error. If any check or argument parsing procedures fail then the hooks are not called.

Parameters:

coro (coroutine) – The coroutine to register as the pre-invoke hook.

Raises:

TypeError – The coroutine passed is not actually a coroutine.

@check

A decorator that adds a global check to the bot.

A global check is similar to a check() that is applied on a per command basis except it is run before any command checks have been verified and applies to every command the bot has.

Note

This function can either be a regular function or a coroutine.

Similar to a command check(), this takes a single parameter of type Context and can only raise exceptions inherited from CommandError.

Example

@bot.check
def check_commands(ctx):
    return ctx.command.qualified_name in allowed_commands
@check_once

A decorator that adds a “call once” global check to the bot.

Unlike regular global checks, this one is called only once per invoke() call.

Regular global checks are called whenever a command is called or Command.can_run() is called. This type of check bypasses that and ensures that it’s called only once, even inside the default help command.

Note

When using this function the Context sent to a group subcommand may only parse the parent command and not the subcommands due to it being invoked once per Bot.invoke() call.

Note

This function can either be a regular function or a coroutine.

Similar to a command check(), this takes a single parameter of type Context and can only raise exceptions inherited from CommandError.

Example

@bot.check_once
def whitelist(ctx):
    return ctx.message.author.id in my_whitelist
@command(*args, **kwargs)

A shortcut decorator that invokes command() and adds it to the internal command list via add_command().

Returns:

A decorator that converts the provided method into a Command, adds it to the bot, then returns it.

Return type:

Callable[…, Command]

@event

A decorator that registers an event to listen to.

You can find more info about the events on the documentation below.

The events must be a coroutine, if not, TypeError is raised.

Example

@client.event
async def on_ready():
    print('Ready!')
Raises:

TypeError – The coroutine passed is not actually a coroutine.

@group(*args, **kwargs)

A shortcut decorator that invokes group() and adds it to the internal command list via add_command().

Returns:

A decorator that converts the provided method into a Group, adds it to the bot, then returns it.

Return type:

Callable[…, Group]

@listen(name=None)

A decorator that registers another function as an external event listener. Basically this allows you to listen to multiple events from different places e.g. such as on_ready()

The functions being listened to must be a coroutine.

Example

@bot.listen()
async def on_message(message):
    print('one')

# in some other file...

@bot.listen('on_message')
async def my_message(message):
    print('two')

Would print one and two in an unspecified order.

Raises:

TypeError – The function being listened to is not a coroutine.

property activity

The activity being used upon logging in.

Type:

Optional[BaseActivity]

add_all_application_commands()

Adds application commands that are either decorated by the Client or added via a cog to the state. This does not register commands with Discord. If you want that, use sync_all_application_commands() instead.

add_all_cog_commands()

Adds all ApplicationCommand objects inside added cogs to the application command list.

add_application_command(command, overwrite=False, use_rollout=False, pre_remove=True)

Adds a BaseApplicationCommand object to the client for use.

Parameters:
  • command (ApplicationCommand) – Command to add to the client for usage.

  • overwrite (bool) – If to overwrite any existing commands that would conflict with this one. Defaults to False

  • use_rollout (bool) – If to apply the rollout signatures instead of existing ones. Defaults to False

  • pre_remove (bool) – If the command should be removed before adding it. This will clear all signatures from storage, including rollout ones.

add_application_command_check(func)

Adds a global application check to the bot.

This is the non-decorator interface to check() and check_once().

Parameters:

func (Callable[[Interaction], MaybeCoro[bool]]]) – The function that was used as a global application check.

add_check(func, *, call_once=False)

Adds a global check to the bot.

This is the non-decorator interface to check() and check_once().

Parameters:
  • func – The function that was used as a global check.

  • call_once (bool) – If the function should only be called once per invoke() call.

add_cog(cog, *, override=False)

Adds a “cog” to the bot.

A cog is a class that has its own event listeners and commands.

Changed in version 2.0: ClientException is raised when a cog with the same name is already loaded.

Parameters:
  • cog (Cog) – The cog to register to the bot.

  • override (bool) –

    If a previously loaded cog with the same name should be ejected instead of raising an error.

    New in version 2.0.

Raises:
  • TypeError – The cog does not inherit from Cog.

  • CommandError – An error happened during loading.

  • .ClientException – A cog with the same name is already loaded.

add_command(command)

Adds a Command into the internal list of commands.

This is usually not called, instead the command() or group() shortcut decorators are used instead.

Changed in version 1.4: Raise CommandRegistrationError instead of generic ClientException

Parameters:

command (Command) – The command to add.

Raises:
  • .CommandRegistrationError – If the command or its alias is already registered by different command.

  • TypeError – If the command passed is not a subclass of Command.

add_listener(func, name=...)

The non decorator alternative to listen().

Parameters:
  • func (coroutine) – The function to call.

  • name (str) – The name of the event to listen for. Defaults to func.__name__.

Example

async def on_ready(): pass
async def my_message(message): pass

bot.add_listener(on_ready)
bot.add_listener(my_message, 'on_message')
add_modal(modal, *, user_id=None)

Registers a Modal for persistent listening.

This method can be called for modals whose lifetime must be eventually superior to the one of the program or for modals whose call does not depend on particular criteria.

Parameters:
  • modal (nextcord.ui.Modal) – The view to register for dispatching.

  • user_id (Optional[int]) – The user ID that the view is attached to. This is used to filter the modal calls based on the users.

Raises:
  • TypeError – A modal was not passed.

  • ValueError – The modal is not persistent. A persistent modal has a set custom_id and all their components with a set custom_id and a timeout set to None.

add_view(view, *, message_id=None)

Registers a View for persistent listening.

This method should be used for when a view is comprised of components that last longer than the lifecycle of the program.

New in version 2.0.

Parameters:
  • view (nextcord.ui.View) – The view to register for dispatching.

  • message_id (Optional[int]) – The message ID that the view is attached to. This is currently used to refresh the view’s state during message update events. If not given then message update events are not propagated for the view.

Raises:
  • TypeError – A view was not passed.

  • ValueError – The view is not persistent. A persistent view has no timeout and all their components have an explicitly provided custom_id.

property allowed_mentions

The allowed mention configuration.

New in version 1.4.

Type:

Optional[AllowedMentions]

application_command_after_invoke(coro)

A decorator that registers a coroutine as a post-invoke hook.

A post-invoke hook is called directly after the command is called. This makes it a useful function to clean-up database connections or any type of clean up required. There may only be one global post-invoke hook.

This post-invoke hook takes a sole parameter, a Interaction.

Note

Similar to application_command_before_invoke(), this is not called unless checks succeed. This hook is, however, always called regardless of the internal command callback raising an error (i.e. ApplicationInvokeError). This makes it ideal for clean-up scenarios.

Parameters:

coro (Coroutines) – The coroutine to register as the post-invoke hook.

Raises:

TypeError – The coroutine passed is not actually a coroutine.

application_command_before_invoke(coro)

A decorator that registers a coroutine as a pre-invoke hook.

A pre-invoke hook is called directly before the command is called. This makes it a useful function to set up database connections or any type of set up required.

This pre-invoke hook takes a sole parameter, a Interaction.

Note

The application_command_before_invoke() and application_command_after_invoke() hooks are only called if all checks pass without error. If any check fails, then the hooks are not called.

Parameters:

coro (coroutine) – The coroutine to register as the pre-invoke hook.

Raises:

TypeError – The coroutine passed is not actually a coroutine.

application_command_check(func)

A decorator that adds a global application check to the bot.

A global check is similar to a check() that is applied on a per command basis except it is run before any command checks have been verified and applies to every command the bot has.

Note

This function can either be a regular function or a coroutine.

Similar to a command check(), this takes a single parameter of type Interaction and can only raise exceptions inherited from ApplicationError.

Example

@client.check
def check_commands(interaction: Interaction) -> bool:
    return interaction.application_command.qualified_name in allowed_commands
property application_flags

The client’s application flags.

New in version 2.0.

Type:

ApplicationFlags

property application_id

The client’s application ID.

If this is not passed via __init__ then this is retrieved through the gateway when an event contains the data. Usually after on_connect() is called.

New in version 2.0.

Type:

Optional[int]

await application_info()

This function is a coroutine.

Retrieves the bot’s application information.

Raises:

.HTTPException – Retrieving the information failed somehow.

Returns:

The bot’s application information.

Return type:

AppInfo

await associate_application_commands(data=None)

Associates global commands registered with Discord with locally added commands.

await before_identify_hook(shard_id, *, initial=False)

This function is a coroutine.

A hook that is called before IDENTIFYing a session. This is useful if you wish to have more control over the synchronization of multiple IDENTIFYing clients.

The default implementation sleeps for 5 seconds.

New in version 1.4.

Parameters:
  • shard_id (int) – The shard ID that requested being IDENTIFY’d

  • initial (bool) – Whether this IDENTIFY is the first initial IDENTIFY.

property cached_messages

Read-only list of messages the connected client has cached.

New in version 1.1.

Type:

Sequence[Message]

await change_presence(*, activity=None, status=None)

This function is a coroutine.

Changes the client’s presence.

Example

game = nextcord.Game("with the API")
await client.change_presence(status=nextcord.Status.idle, activity=game)

Changed in version 2.0: Removed the afk keyword-only parameter.

Parameters:
  • activity (Optional[BaseActivity]) – The activity being done. None if no currently active activity is done.

  • status (Optional[Status]) – Indicates what status to change to. If None, then Status.online is used.

Raises:

.InvalidArgument – If the activity parameter is not the proper type.

clear()

Clears the internal state of the bot.

After this, the bot can be considered “re-opened”, i.e. is_closed() and is_ready() both return False along with the bot’s internal cache cleared.

await close()

This function is a coroutine.

Closes the connection to Discord.

property cogs

A read-only mapping of cog name to cog.

Type:

Mapping[str, Cog]

property commands

A unique set of commands without aliases that are registered.

Type:

Set[Command]

await connect(*, reconnect=True)

This function is a coroutine.

Creates a websocket connection and lets the websocket listen to messages from Discord. This is a loop that runs the entire event system and miscellaneous aspects of the library. Control is not resumed until the WebSocket connection is terminated.

Parameters:

reconnect (bool) – If we should attempt reconnecting, either due to internet failure or a specific failure on Discord’s part. Certain disconnects that lead to bad state will not be handled (such as invalid sharding payloads or bad tokens).

Raises:
  • .GatewayNotFound – If the gateway to connect to Discord is not found. Usually if this is thrown then there is a Discord API outage.

  • .ConnectionClosed – The websocket connection has been terminated.

await create_dm(user)

This function is a coroutine.

Creates a DMChannel with this user.

This should be rarely called, as this is done transparently for most people.

New in version 2.0.

Parameters:

user (Snowflake) – The user to create a DM with.

Returns:

The channel that was created.

Return type:

DMChannel

await create_guild(*, name, region=VoiceRegion.us_west, icon=None, code=...)

This function is a coroutine.

Creates a Guild.

Bot accounts in more than 10 guilds are not allowed to create guilds.

Changed in version 2.1: The icon parameter now accepts File, Attachment, and Asset.

Parameters:
  • name (str) – The name of the guild.

  • region (VoiceRegion) – The region for the voice communication server. Defaults to VoiceRegion.us_west.

  • icon (Optional[Union[bytes, Asset, Attachment, File]]) – The bytes-like object, File, Attachment, or Asset representing the icon. See ClientUser.edit() for more details on what is expected.

  • code (str) –

    The code for a template to create the guild with.

    New in version 1.4.

Raises:
  • .HTTPException – Guild creation failed.

  • .InvalidArgument – Invalid icon image format given. Must be PNG or JPG.

Returns:

The guild created. This is not the same guild that is added to cache.

Return type:

Guild

property default_guild_ids

List[int] The default guild ids for all application commands.

New in version 2.3.

await delete_application_commands(*commands, guild_id=None)

This function is a coroutine. Deletes the given application commands either from a specific guild or globally, and removes the command IDs + signatures from the bot.

Parameters:
  • commands (BaseApplicationCommand) – Application command to delete. Multiple args are accepted.

  • guild_id (Optional[int]) – ID of the guild to delete the application commands from. If set to None, the commands will be deleted from global commands instead. Defaults to None.

await delete_invite(invite)

This function is a coroutine.

Revokes an Invite, URL, or ID to an invite.

You must have the manage_channels permission in the associated guild to do this.

Parameters:

invite (Union[Invite, str]) – The invite to revoke.

Raises:
  • .Forbidden – You do not have permissions to revoke invites.

  • .NotFound – The invite is invalid or expired.

  • .HTTPException – Revoking the invite failed.

await delete_unknown_application_commands(data=None)

Deletes unknown global commands.

await discover_application_commands(data=None, *, guild_id=None, associate_known=True, delete_unknown=True, update_known=True)

This function is a coroutine. Associates existing, deletes unknown, and updates modified commands for either global commands or a specific guild. This does a deep check on found commands, which may be expensive CPU-wise.

Running this for global or the same guild multiple times at once may cause unexpected or unstable behavior.

Parameters:
  • data (Optional[List[dict]]) – Payload from HTTPClient.get_guild_commands or HTTPClient.get_global_commands to deploy with. If None, the payload will be retrieved from Discord.

  • guild_id (Optional[int]) – Guild ID to deploy application commands to. If None, global commands are deployed to.

  • associate_known (bool) – If True, commands on Discord that pass a signature check and a deep check will be associated with locally added ApplicationCommand objects.

  • delete_unknown (bool) – If True, commands on Discord that fail a signature check will be removed. If update_known is False, commands that pass the signature check but fail the deep check will also be removed.

  • update_known (bool) – If True, commands on Discord that pass a signature check but fail the deep check will be updated.

property emojis

The emojis that the connected client has.

Type:

List[Emoji]

property extensions

A read-only mapping of extension name to extension.

Type:

Mapping[str, types.ModuleType]

await fetch_channel(channel_id, /)

This function is a coroutine.

Retrieves a abc.GuildChannel, abc.PrivateChannel, or Thread with the specified ID.

Note

This method is an API call. For general usage, consider get_channel() instead.

New in version 1.2.

Raises:
  • .InvalidData – An unknown channel type was received from Discord.

  • .HTTPException – Retrieving the channel failed.

  • .NotFound – Invalid Channel ID.

  • .Forbidden – You do not have permission to fetch this channel.

Returns:

The channel from the ID.

Return type:

Union[abc.GuildChannel, abc.PrivateChannel, Thread]

await fetch_guild(guild_id, /, *, with_counts=True)

This function is a coroutine.

Retrieves a Guild from an ID.

Note

Using this, you will not receive Guild.channels, Guild.members, Member.activity and Member.voice per Member.

Note

This method is an API call. For general usage, consider get_guild() instead.

Parameters:
Raises:
  • .Forbidden – You do not have access to the guild.

  • .HTTPException – Getting the guild failed.

Returns:

The guild from the ID.

Return type:

Guild

fetch_guilds(*, limit=200, before=None, after=None)

Retrieves an AsyncIterator that enables receiving your guilds.

Note

Using this, you will only receive Guild.owner, Guild.icon, Guild.id, and Guild.name per Guild.

Note

This method is an API call. For general usage, consider guilds instead.

Examples

Usage

async for guild in client.fetch_guilds(limit=150):
    print(guild.name)

Flattening into a list

guilds = await client.fetch_guilds(limit=150).flatten()
# guilds is now a list of Guild...

All parameters are optional.

Parameters:
  • limit (Optional[int]) –

    The number of guilds to retrieve. If None, it retrieves every guild you have access to. Note, however, that this would make it a slow operation. Defaults to 200.

    Changed in version 2.0: Changed default to 200.

  • before (Union[abc.Snowflake, datetime.datetime]) – Retrieves guilds before this date or object. If a datetime is provided, it is recommended to use a UTC aware datetime. If the datetime is naive, it is assumed to be local time.

  • after (Union[abc.Snowflake, datetime.datetime]) – Retrieve guilds after this date or object. If a datetime is provided, it is recommended to use a UTC aware datetime. If the datetime is naive, it is assumed to be local time.

Raises:

.HTTPException – Getting the guilds failed.

Yields:

Guild – The guild with the guild data parsed.

await fetch_invite(url, *, with_counts=True, with_expiration=True)

This function is a coroutine.

Gets an Invite from a discord.gg URL or ID.

Note

If the invite is for a guild you have not joined, the guild and channel attributes of the returned Invite will be PartialInviteGuild and PartialInviteChannel respectively.

Parameters:
Raises:
  • .NotFound – The invite has expired or is invalid.

  • .HTTPException – Getting the invite failed.

Returns:

The invite from the URL/ID.

Return type:

Invite

await fetch_premium_sticker_packs()

This function is a coroutine.

Retrieves all available premium sticker packs.

New in version 2.0.

Raises:

.HTTPException – Retrieving the sticker packs failed.

Returns:

All available premium sticker packs.

Return type:

List[StickerPack]

await fetch_stage_instance(channel_id, /)

This function is a coroutine.

Gets a StageInstance for a stage channel id.

New in version 2.0.

Parameters:

channel_id (int) – The stage channel ID.

Raises:
  • .NotFound – The stage instance or channel could not be found.

  • .HTTPException – Getting the stage instance failed.

Returns:

The stage instance from the stage channel ID.

Return type:

StageInstance

await fetch_sticker(sticker_id, /)

This function is a coroutine.

Retrieves a Sticker with the specified ID.

New in version 2.0.

Raises:
  • .HTTPException – Retrieving the sticker failed.

  • .NotFound – Invalid sticker ID.

Returns:

The sticker you requested.

Return type:

Union[StandardSticker, GuildSticker]

await fetch_template(code)

This function is a coroutine.

Gets a Template from a discord.new URL or code.

Parameters:

code (Union[Template, str]) – The Discord Template Code or URL (must be a discord.new URL).

Raises:
  • .NotFound – The template is invalid.

  • .HTTPException – Getting the template failed.

Returns:

The template from the URL/code.

Return type:

Template

await fetch_user(user_id, /)

This function is a coroutine.

Retrieves a User based on their ID. You do not have to share any guilds with the user to get this information, however many operations do require that you do.

Note

This method is an API call. If you have nextcord.Intents.members and member cache enabled, consider get_user() instead.

Parameters:

user_id (int) – The user’s ID to fetch from.

Raises:
  • .NotFound – A user with this ID does not exist.

  • .HTTPException – Fetching the user failed.

Returns:

The user you requested.

Return type:

User

await fetch_webhook(webhook_id, /)

This function is a coroutine.

Retrieves a Webhook with the specified ID.

Raises:
  • .HTTPException – Retrieving the webhook failed.

  • .NotFound – Invalid webhook ID.

  • .Forbidden – You do not have permission to fetch this webhook.

Returns:

The webhook you requested.

Return type:

Webhook

await fetch_widget(guild_id, /)

This function is a coroutine.

Gets a Widget from a guild ID.

Note

The guild must have the widget enabled to get this information.

Parameters:

guild_id (int) – The ID of the guild.

Raises:
  • .Forbidden – The widget for this guild is disabled.

  • .HTTPException – Retrieving the widget failed.

Returns:

The guild’s widget.

Return type:

Widget

get_all_application_commands()

Returns a copied set of all added BaseApplicationCommand objects.

for ... in get_all_channels()

A generator that retrieves every abc.GuildChannel the client can ‘access’.

This is equivalent to:

for guild in client.guilds:
    for channel in guild.channels:
        yield channel

Note

Just because you receive a abc.GuildChannel does not mean that you can communicate in said channel. abc.GuildChannel.permissions_for() should be used for that.

Yields:

abc.GuildChannel – A channel the client can ‘access’.

for ... in get_all_members()

Returns a generator with every Member the client can see.

This is equivalent to:

for guild in client.guilds:
    for member in guild.members:
        yield member
Yields:

Member – A member the client can see.

get_application_command(command_id)

Gets an application command from the cache that has the given command ID.

Parameters:

command_id (int) – Command ID corresponding to an application command.

Returns:

Returns the application command corresponding to the ID. If no command is found, None is returned instead.

Return type:

Optional[BaseApplicationCommand]

get_application_command_from_signature(name, cmd_type, guild_id)

Gets a locally stored application command object that matches the given signature.

Parameters:
  • name (str) – Name of the application command. Capital sensitive.

  • cmd_type (Union[int, ApplicationCommandType]) – Type of application command.

  • guild_id (Optional[int]) – Guild ID of the signature. If set to None, it will attempt to get the global signature.

Returns:

command – Application Command with the given signature. If no command with that signature is found, returns None instead.

Return type:

Optional[BaseApplicationCommand]

get_application_commands(rollout=False)

Gets registered global commands.

Parameters:

rollout (bool) – Whether unregistered/unassociated commands should be returned as well. Defaults to False

Returns:

List of BaseApplicationCommand objects that are global.

Return type:

List[BaseApplicationCommand]

get_channel(id, /)

Returns a channel or thread with the given ID.

Parameters:

id (int) – The ID to search for.

Returns:

The returned channel or None if not found.

Return type:

Optional[Union[abc.GuildChannel, Thread, abc.PrivateChannel]]

get_cog(name)

Gets the cog instance requested.

If the cog is not found, None is returned instead.

Parameters:

name (str) – The name of the cog you are requesting. This is equivalent to the name passed via keyword argument in class creation or the class name if unspecified.

Returns:

The cog that was requested. If not found, returns None.

Return type:

Optional[Cog]

get_command(name)

Get a Command from the internal list of commands.

This could also be used as a way to get aliases.

The name could be fully qualified (e.g. 'foo bar') will get the subcommand bar of the group command foo. If a subcommand is not found then None is returned just as usual.

Parameters:

name (str) – The name of the command to get.

Returns:

The command that was requested. If not found, returns None.

Return type:

Optional[Command]

await get_context(message, *, cls=<class 'nextcord.ext.commands.context.Context'>)

This function is a coroutine.

Returns the invocation context from the message.

This is a more low-level counter-part for process_commands() to allow users more fine grained control over the processing.

The returned context is not guaranteed to be a valid invocation context, Context.valid must be checked to make sure it is. If the context is not valid then it is not a valid candidate to be invoked under invoke().

Parameters:
  • message (nextcord.Message) – The message to get the invocation context from.

  • cls – The factory class that will be used to create the context. By default, this is Context. Should a custom class be provided, it must be similar enough to Context's interface.

Returns:

The invocation context. The type of this can change via the cls parameter.

Return type:

Context

get_emoji(id, /)

Returns an emoji with the given ID.

Parameters:

id (int) – The ID to search for.

Returns:

The custom emoji or None if not found.

Return type:

Optional[Emoji]

get_guild(id, /)

Returns a guild with the given ID.

Parameters:

id (int) – The ID to search for.

Returns:

The guild or None if not found.

Return type:

Optional[Guild]

get_interaction(data, *, cls=<class 'nextcord.interactions.Interaction'>)

Returns an interaction for a gateway event.

Parameters:
  • data – The data direct from the gateway.

  • cls – The factory class that will be used to create the interaction. By default, this is Interaction. Should a custom class be provided, it should be a subclass of Interaction.

Returns:

  • Interaction – An instance Interaction or the provided subclass.

  • .. note:: – This is synchronous due to how slash commands are implemented.

get_partial_messageable(id, *, type=None)

Returns a partial messageable with the given channel ID.

This is useful if you have a channel_id but don’t want to do an API call to send messages to it.

New in version 2.0.

Parameters:
  • id (int) – The channel ID to create a partial messageable for.

  • type (Optional[ChannelType]) – The underlying channel type for the partial messageable.

Returns:

The partial messageable

Return type:

PartialMessageable

await get_prefix(message)

This function is a coroutine.

Retrieves the prefix the bot is listening to with the message as a context.

Parameters:

message (nextcord.Message) – The message context to get the prefix of.

Returns:

A list of prefixes or a single prefix that the bot is listening for.

Return type:

Union[List[str], str]

get_scheduled_event(id, /)

Returns a scheduled event with the given ID.

New in version 2.0.

Parameters:

id (int) – The scheduled event’s ID to search for.

Returns:

The scheduled event or None if not found.

Return type:

Optional[ScheduledEvent]

get_stage_instance(id, /)

Returns a stage instance with the given stage channel ID.

New in version 2.0.

Parameters:

id (int) – The ID to search for.

Returns:

The returns stage instance of None if not found.

Return type:

Optional[StageInstance]

get_sticker(id, /)

Returns a guild sticker with the given ID.

New in version 2.0.

Note

To retrieve standard stickers, use fetch_sticker(). or fetch_premium_sticker_packs().

Returns:

The sticker or None if not found.

Return type:

Optional[GuildSticker]

get_user(id, /)

Returns a user with the given ID.

Parameters:

id (int) – The ID to search for.

Returns:

The user or None if not found.

Return type:

Optional[User]

property guilds

The guilds that the connected client is a member of.

Type:

List[Guild]

property intents

The intents configured for this connection.

New in version 1.5.

Type:

Intents

await invoke(ctx)

This function is a coroutine.

Invokes the command given under the invocation context and handles all the internal event dispatch mechanisms.

Parameters:

ctx (Context) – The invocation context to invoke.

is_closed()

bool: Indicates if the websocket connection is closed.

await is_owner(user)

This function is a coroutine. Checks if a User or Member is the owner of this bot.

If an owner_id is not set, it is fetched automatically through the use of application_info().

Changed in version 1.3: The function also checks if the application is team-owned if owner_ids is not set.

Parameters:

user (abc.User) – The user to check for.

Returns:

Whether the user is the owner.

Return type:

bool

is_ready()

bool: Specifies if the client’s internal cache is ready for use.

is_ws_ratelimited()

bool: Whether the websocket is currently rate limited.

This can be useful to know when deciding whether you should query members using HTTP or via the gateway.

New in version 1.6.

property latency

Measures latency between a HEARTBEAT and a HEARTBEAT_ACK in seconds.

This could be referred to as the Discord WebSocket protocol latency.

Type:

float

load_extension(name, *, package=None, extras=None)

Loads an extension.

An extension is a python module that contains commands, cogs, or listeners.

An extension must have a global function, setup defined as the entry point on what to do when the extension is loaded. This entry point must have a single argument, the bot.

Parameters:
  • name (str) – The extension name to load. It must be dot separated like regular Python imports if accessing a sub-module. e.g. foo.test if you want to import foo/test.py.

  • package (Optional[str]) –

    The package name to resolve relative imports with. This is required when loading an extension using a relative path, e.g .foo.test. Defaults to None.

    New in version 1.7.

  • extras (Optional[dict]) –

    A mapping of kwargs to values to be passed to your cog’s __init__ method as keyword arguments.

    Usage

    # main.py
    bot.load_extension("cogs.me_cog", extras={"keyword_arg": True})
    
    # cogs/me_cog.py
    class MeCog(commands.Cog):
        def __init__(self, bot, keyword_arg):
            self.bot = bot
            self.keyword_arg = keyword_arg
    
    def setup(bot, **kwargs):
        bot.add_cog(MeCog(bot, **kwargs))
    
    # Alternately
    def setup(bot, keyword_arg):
        bot.add_cog(MeCog(bot, keyword_arg))
    

    New in version 2.0.0.

Raises:
  • ExtensionNotFound – The extension could not be imported. This is also raised if the name of the extension could not be resolved using the provided package parameter.

  • ExtensionAlreadyLoaded – The extension is already loaded.

  • NoEntryPointError – The extension does not have a setup function.

  • ExtensionFailed – The extension or its setup function had an execution error.

  • InvalidSetupArgumentsload_extension was given extras but the setup function did not take any additional arguments.

load_extensions(names, *, package=None, packages=None, extras=None, stop_at_error=False)

Loads all extensions provided in a list.

Note

By default, any exceptions found while loading will not be raised but will be printed to console (standard error/stderr).

New in version 2.1.

Parameters:
  • names (List[str]) – The names of all of the extensions to load.

  • package (Optional[str]) – The package name to resolve relative imports with. This is required when loading an extension using a relative path, e.g .foo.test. Defaults to None.

  • packages (Optional[List[str]]) –

    A list of package names to resolve relative imports with. This is required when loading an extension using a relative path, e.g .foo.test. Defaults to None.

    Usage:

    # main.py
    bot.load_extensions(
        [
            ".my_cog",
            ".my_cog_two",
        ],
        packages=[
            "cogs.coolcog",
            "cogs.coolcogtwo",
        ],
    )
    
    # cogs/coolcog/my_cog.py
    class MyCog(commands.Cog):
        def __init__(self, bot):
            self.bot = bot
    
        # ...
    
    def setup(bot):
        bot.add_cog(MyCog(bot))
    
    # cogs/coolcogtwo/my_cog_two.py
    class MyCogTwo(commands.Cog):
        def __init__(self, bot):
            self.bot = bot
    
        # ...
    
    def setup(bot):
        bot.add_cog(MyCogTwo(bot))
    

  • extras (Optional[List[Dict[str, Any]]]) –

    A list of extra arguments to pass to the extension’s setup function.

    Usage:

    # main.py
    bot.load_extensions(
        [
            ".my_cog",
            ".my_cog_two",
        ],
        package="cogs",
        extras=[{"my_attribute": 11}, {"my_other_attribute": 12}],
    )
    
    # cogs/my_cog.py
    class MyCog(commands.Cog):
        def __init__(self, bot, my_attribute):
            self.bot = bot
            self.my_attribute = my_attribute
    
        # ...
    
    def setup(bot, **kwargs):
        bot.add_cog(MyCog(bot, **kwargs))
    
    # cogs/my_cog_two.py
    class MyCogTwo(commands.Cog):
        def __init__(self, bot, my_other_attribute):
            self.bot = bot
            self.my_other_attribute = my_other_attribute
    
        # ...
    
    def setup(bot, my_other_attribute):
        bot.add_cog(MyCogTwo(bot, my_other_attribute))
    

  • stop_at_error (bool) – Whether or not an exception should be raised if we encounter one. Set to False by default.

Returns:

A list that contains the names of all of the extensions that loaded successfully.

Return type:

List[str]

Raises:
load_extensions_from_module(source_module, *, ignore=None, stop_at_error=False)

Loads all extensions found in a module.

Once an extension found in a module has been loaded and did not throw any exceptions, it will be added to a list of extension names that will be returned.

Note

By default, any exceptions found while loading will not be raised but will be printed to console (standard error/stderr).

New in version 2.1.

Parameters:
  • source_module (str) – The name of the source module to look for submodules.

  • ignore (Optional[List[str]]) – File names of extensions to ignore.

  • stop_at_error (bool) – Whether or not an exception should be raised if we encounter one. Set to False by default.

Returns:

A list that contains the names of all of the extensions that loaded successfully.

Return type:

List[str]

Raises:
await login(token)

This function is a coroutine.

Logs in the client with the specified credentials.

Parameters:

token (str) – The authentication token. Do not prefix this token with anything as the library will do it for you.

Raises:
  • .LoginFailure – The wrong credentials are passed.

  • .HTTPException – An unknown HTTP related error occurred, usually when it isn’t 200 or the known incorrect credentials passing status code.

message_command(name=None, *, name_localizations=None, guild_ids=..., dm_permission=None, default_member_permissions=None, nsfw=False, force_global=False)

Creates a Message context command from the decorated function.

Parameters:
  • name (str) – Name of the command that users will see. If not set, it defaults to the name of the callback.

  • name_localizations (Dict[Union[Locale, str], str]) – Name(s) of the command for users of specific locales. The locale code should be the key, with the localized name as the value

  • guild_ids (Optional[Iterable[int]]) – IDs of Guild’s to add this command to. If not passed and Client.default_guild_ids is set, then those default guild ids will be used instead. If both of those are unset, then the command will be a global command.

  • dm_permission (bool) – If the command should be usable in DMs or not. Setting to False will disable the command from being usable in DMs. Only for global commands, but will not error on guild.

  • default_member_permissions (Optional[Union[Permissions, int]]) – Permission(s) required to use the command. Inputting 8 or Permissions(administrator=True) for example will only allow Administrators to use the command. If set to 0, nobody will be able to use it by default. Server owners CAN override the permission requirements.

  • nsfw (bool) –

    Whether the command can only be used in age-restricted channels. Defaults to False.

    New in version 2.4.

  • force_global (bool) – If True, will force this command to register as a global command, even if guild_ids is set. Will still register to guilds. Has no effect if guild_ids are never set or added to.

await on_application_command_error(interaction, exception)

This function is a coroutine.

The default application command error handler provided by the bot.

By default this prints to stderr however it could be overridden to have a different implementation.

This only fires if you do not specify any listeners for command error.

await on_command_error(context, exception)

This function is a coroutine.

The default command error handler provided by the bot.

By default this prints to stderr however it could be overridden to have a different implementation.

This only fires if you do not specify any listeners for command error.

await on_error(event_method, *args, **kwargs)

This function is a coroutine.

The default error handler provided by the client.

By default this prints to stderr however it could be overridden to have a different implementation. Check on_error() for more details.

parse_mentions(text)

Parses user mentions in a string and returns a list of User objects.

Note

This does not include role or channel mentions. See Guild.parse_mentions for Member objects, Guild.parse_role_mentions for Role objects, and Guild.parse_channel_mentions for GuildChannel objects.

Note

Only cached users will be returned. To get the IDs of all users mentioned, use parse_raw_mentions() instead.

New in version 2.2.

Parameters:

text (str) – String to parse mentions in.

Returns:

List of User objects that were mentioned in the string.

Return type:

List[User]

property persistent_views

A sequence of persistent views added to the client.

New in version 2.0.

Type:

Sequence[View]

property private_channels

The private channels that the connected client is participating on.

Note

This returns only up to 128 most recent private channels due to an internal working on how Discord deals with private channels.

Type:

List[abc.PrivateChannel]

await process_application_commands(interaction)

This function is a coroutine. Processes the data in the given interaction and calls associated applications or autocomplete if possible. Lazy-loads commands if enabled.

Parameters:

interaction (Interaction) – Interaction from Discord to read data from.

await process_commands(message)

This function is a coroutine.

This function processes the commands that have been registered to the bot and other groups. Without this coroutine, none of the commands will be triggered.

By default, this coroutine is called inside the on_message() event. If you choose to override the on_message() event, then you should invoke this coroutine as well.

This is built using other low level tools, and is equivalent to a call to get_context() followed by a call to invoke().

This also checks if the message’s author is a bot and doesn’t call get_context() or invoke() if so.

Parameters:

message (nextcord.Message) – The message to process commands for.

await process_with_str(message, content)

This function is a coroutine.

This function is like process_commands() except it processes the provided message with different content.

This is useful if you want to execute multiple commands in a single message.

Example

@bot.event
async def on_message(message):
    for msg in message.content.split(";"):
        await bot.process_with_str(message, msg)
Parameters:
  • message (nextcord.Message) – The message to process commands for.

  • content (str) – The content to subsitute for the message’s content.

await register_application_commands(*commands, guild_id=None)

This function is a coroutine. Registers the given application commands either for a specific guild or globally, and adds the commands to the bot.

Parameters:
  • commands (BaseApplicationCommand) – Application command to register. Multiple args are accepted.

  • guild_id (Optional[int]) – ID of the guild to register the application commands to. If set to None, the commands will be registered as global commands instead. Defaults to None.

await register_new_application_commands(data=None, guild_id=None)

This function is a coroutine. Registers locally added application commands that don’t match a signature that Discord has registered for either global commands or a specific guild.

Parameters:
  • data (Optional[List[dict]]) – Data to use when comparing local application commands to what Discord has. Should be a list of application command data from Discord. If left as None, it will be fetched if needed. Defaults to None

  • guild_id (Optional[int]) – ID of the guild to sync application commands with. If set to None, global commands will be synced instead. Defaults to None.

reload_extension(name, *, package=None)

Atomically reloads an extension.

This replaces the extension with the same extension, only refreshed. This is equivalent to a unload_extension() followed by a load_extension() except done in an atomic way. That is, if an operation fails mid-reload then the bot will roll-back to the prior working state.

Parameters:
  • name (str) – The extension name to reload. It must be dot separated like regular Python imports if accessing a sub-module. e.g. foo.test if you want to import foo/test.py.

  • package (Optional[str]) –

    The package name to resolve relative imports with. This is required when reloading an extension using a relative path, e.g .foo.test. Defaults to None.

    New in version 1.7.

Raises:
  • ExtensionNotLoaded – The extension was not loaded.

  • ExtensionNotFound – The extension could not be imported. This is also raised if the name of the extension could not be resolved using the provided package parameter.

  • NoEntryPointError – The extension does not have a setup function.

  • ExtensionFailed – The extension setup function had an execution error.

remove_application_command_check(func)

Removes a global check from the bot.

This function is idempotent and will not raise an exception if the function is not in the global checks.

Parameters:

func (Callable[[Interaction], MaybeCoro[bool]]]) – The function to remove from the global application checks.

remove_check(func, *, call_once=False)

Removes a global check from the bot.

This function is idempotent and will not raise an exception if the function is not in the global checks.

Parameters:
  • func – The function to remove from the global checks.

  • call_once (bool) – If the function was added with call_once=True in the Bot.add_check() call or using check_once().

remove_cog(name)

Removes a cog from the bot and returns it.

All registered commands and event listeners that the cog has registered will be removed as well.

If no cog is found then this method has no effect.

Parameters:

name (str) – The name of the cog to remove.

Returns:

The cog that was removed. None if not found.

Return type:

Optional[Cog]

remove_command(name)

Remove a Command from the internal list of commands.

This could also be used as a way to remove aliases.

Parameters:

name (str) – The name of the command to remove.

Returns:

The command that was removed. If the name is not valid then None is returned instead.

Return type:

Optional[Command]

remove_listener(func, name=...)

Removes a listener from the pool of listeners.

Parameters:
  • func – The function that was used as a listener to remove.

  • name (str) – The name of the event we want to remove. Defaults to func.__name__.

remove_modal(modal)

Removes a Modal from persistent listening.

This method should be used if a persistent modal is set in a cog and should be freed when the cog is unloaded to save memory.

New in version 2.3.

Parameters:

modal (nextcord.ui.Modal) – The modal to remove from dispatching.

Raises:
  • TypeError – A modal was not passed.

  • ValueError – The modal is not persistent. A persistent modal has a set custom_id and all their components with a set custom_id and a timeout set to None.

remove_view(view, message_id=None)

Removes a View from persistent listening.

This method should be used if a persistent view is set in a cog and should be freed when the cog is unloaded to save memory.

New in version 2.3.

Parameters:
  • view (nextcord.ui.View) – The view to remove from dispatching.

  • message_id (Optional[int]) – The message ID that the view is attached to. This is used to properly remove the view from the view store.

Raises:
  • TypeError – A view was not passed.

  • ValueError – The view is not persistent. A persistent view has no timeout and all their components have an explicitly provided custom_id.

await rollout_application_commands()

This function is a coroutine. Deploys global application commands and registers new ones if enabled.

run(*args, **kwargs)

A blocking call that abstracts away the event loop initialisation from you.

If you want more control over the event loop then this function should not be used. Use start() coroutine or connect() + login().

Roughly Equivalent to:

try:
    loop.run_until_complete(start(*args, **kwargs))
except KeyboardInterrupt:
    loop.run_until_complete(close())
    # cancel all tasks lingering
finally:
    loop.close()

Warning

This function must be the last function to call due to the fact that it is blocking. That means that registration of events or anything being called after this function call will not execute until it returns.

property scheduled_events

A list of scheduled events

New in version 2.0.

Type:

List[ScheduledEvent]

slash_command(name=None, description=None, *, name_localizations=None, description_localizations=None, guild_ids=..., dm_permission=None, nsfw=False, default_member_permissions=None, force_global=False)

Creates a Slash application command from the decorated function.

Parameters:
  • name (str) – Name of the command that users will see. If not set, it defaults to the name of the callback.

  • description (str) – Description of the command that users will see. If not set, the docstring will be used. If no docstring is found for the command callback, it defaults to “No description provided”.

  • name_localizations (Dict[Union[Locale, str], str]) – Name(s) of the command for users of specific locales. The locale code should be the key, with the localized name as the value.

  • description_localizations (Dict[Union[Locale, str], str]) – Description(s) of the command for users of specific locales. The locale code should be the key, with the localized description as the value.

  • guild_ids (Optional[Iterable[int]]) – IDs of Guild’s to add this command to. If not passed and Client.default_guild_ids is set, then those default guild ids will be used instead. If both of those are unset, then the command will be a global command.

  • dm_permission (bool) – If the command should be usable in DMs or not. Setting to False will disable the command from being usable in DMs. Only for global commands, but will not error on guild.

  • default_member_permissions (Optional[Union[Permissions, int]]) – Permission(s) required to use the command. Inputting 8 or Permissions(administrator=True) for example will only allow Administrators to use the command. If set to 0, nobody will be able to use it by default. Server owners CAN override the permission requirements.

  • nsfw (bool) –

    Whether the command can only be used in age-restricted channels. Defaults to False.

    New in version 2.4.

  • force_global (bool) – If True, will force this command to register as a global command, even if guild_ids is set. Will still register to guilds. Has no effect if guild_ids are never set or added to.

await start(token, *, reconnect=True)

This function is a coroutine.

A shorthand coroutine for login() + connect().

Raises:

TypeError – An unexpected keyword argument was received.

property status

Status: The status being used upon logging on to Discord.

property stickers

The stickers that the connected client has.

New in version 2.0.

Type:

List[GuildSticker]

await sync_all_application_commands(data=None, *, use_rollout=True, associate_known=True, delete_unknown=True, update_known=True, register_new=True, ignore_forbidden=True)

This function is a coroutine.

Syncs all application commands with Discord. Will sync global commands if any commands added are global, and syncs with all guilds that have an application command targeting them.

This may call Discord many times depending on how different guilds you have local commands for, and how many commands Discord needs to be updated or added, which may cause your bot to be rate limited or even Cloudflare banned in VERY extreme cases.

This may incur high CPU usage depending on how many commands you have and how complex they are, which may cause your bot to halt while it checks local commands against the existing commands that Discord has.

For a more targeted version of this method, see Client.sync_application_commands()

Parameters:
  • data (Optional[Dict[Optional[int], List[dict]]]) – Data to use when comparing local application commands to what Discord has. The key should be the int guild ID (None for global) corresponding to the value list of application command payloads from Discord. Any guild ID’s not provided will be fetched if needed. Defaults to None

  • use_rollout (bool) – If the rollout guild IDs of commands should be used. Defaults to True

  • associate_known (bool) – If local commands that match a command already on Discord should be associated with each other. Defaults to True

  • delete_unknown (bool) – If commands on Discord that don’t match a local command should be deleted. Defaults to True

  • update_known (bool) – If commands on Discord have a basic match with a local command, but don’t fully match, should be updated. Defaults to True

  • register_new (bool) – If a local command that doesn’t have a basic match on Discord should be added to Discord. Defaults to True

  • ignore_forbidden (bool) – If this command should suppress a errors.Forbidden exception when the bot encounters a guild where it doesn’t have permissions to view application commands. Defaults to True

await sync_application_commands(data=None, *, guild_id=None, associate_known=True, delete_unknown=True, update_known=True, register_new=True)

This function is a coroutine. Syncs the locally added application commands with the Guild corresponding to the given ID, or syncs global commands if the guild_id is None.

Parameters:
  • data (Optional[List[dict]]) – Data to use when comparing local application commands to what Discord has. Should be a list of application command data from Discord. If left as None, it will be fetched if needed. Defaults to None.

  • guild_id (Optional[int]) – ID of the guild to sync application commands with. If set to None, global commands will be synced instead. Defaults to None.

  • associate_known (bool) – If local commands that match a command already on Discord should be associated with each other. Defaults to True.

  • delete_unknown (bool) – If commands on Discord that don’t match a local command should be deleted. Defaults to True.

  • update_known (bool) – If commands on Discord have a basic match with a local command, but don’t fully match, should be updated. Defaults to True.

  • register_new (bool) – If a local command that doesn’t have a basic match on Discord should be added to Discord. Defaults to True.

unload_extension(name, *, package=None)

Unloads an extension.

When the extension is unloaded, all commands, listeners, and cogs are removed from the bot and the module is un-imported.

The extension can provide an optional global function, teardown, to do miscellaneous clean-up if necessary. This function takes a single parameter, the bot, similar to setup from load_extension().

Parameters:
  • name (str) – The extension name to unload. It must be dot separated like regular Python imports if accessing a sub-module. e.g. foo.test if you want to import foo/test.py.

  • package (Optional[str]) –

    The package name to resolve relative imports with. This is required when unloading an extension using a relative path, e.g .foo.test. Defaults to None.

    New in version 1.7.

Raises:
await update_application_commands(data=None)

Updates global commands that have slightly changed with Discord.

property user

Represents the connected client. None if not logged in.

Type:

Optional[ClientUser]

user_command(name=None, *, name_localizations=None, guild_ids=..., dm_permission=None, default_member_permissions=None, nsfw=False, force_global=False)

Creates a User context command from the decorated function.

Parameters:
  • name (str) – Name of the command that users will see. If not set, it defaults to the name of the callback.

  • name_localizations (Dict[Union[Locale, str], str]) – Name(s) of the command for users of specific locales. The locale code should be the key, with the localized name as the value

  • guild_ids (Optional[Iterable[int]]) – IDs of Guild’s to add this command to. If not passed and Client.default_guild_ids is set, then those default guild ids will be used instead. If both of those are unset, then the command will be a global command.

  • dm_permission (bool) – If the command should be usable in DMs or not. Setting to False will disable the command from being usable in DMs. Only for global commands, but will not error on guild.

  • default_member_permissions (Optional[Union[Permissions, int]]) – Permission(s) required to use the command. Inputting 8 or Permissions(administrator=True) for example will only allow Administrators to use the command. If set to 0, nobody will be able to use it by default. Server owners CAN override the permission requirements.

  • nsfw (bool) –

    Whether the command can only be used in age-restricted channels. Defaults to False.

    New in version 2.4.

  • force_global (bool) – If True, will force this command to register as a global command, even if guild_ids is set. Will still register to guilds. Has no effect if guild_ids are never set or added to.

property users

Returns a list of all the users the bot can see.

Type:

List[User]

property voice_clients

Represents a list of voice connections.

These are usually VoiceClient instances.

Type:

List[VoiceProtocol]

wait_for(event, *, check=None, timeout=None)

This function is a coroutine.

Waits for a WebSocket event to be dispatched.

This could be used to wait for a user to reply to a message, or to react to a message, or to edit a message in a self-contained way.

The timeout parameter is passed onto asyncio.wait_for(). By default, it does not timeout. Note that this does propagate the asyncio.TimeoutError for you in case of timeout and is provided for ease of use.

In case the event returns multiple arguments, a tuple containing those arguments is returned instead. Please check the documentation for a list of events and their parameters.

This function returns the first event that meets the requirements.

Examples

Waiting for a user reply:

@client.event
async def on_message(message):
    if message.content.startswith('$greet'):
        channel = message.channel
        await channel.send('Say hello!')

        def check(m):
            return m.content == 'hello' and m.channel == channel

        msg = await client.wait_for('message', check=check)
        await channel.send(f'Hello {msg.author}!')

Waiting for a thumbs up reaction from the message author:

@client.event
async def on_message(message):
    if message.content.startswith('$thumb'):
        channel = message.channel
        await channel.send('Send me that 👍 reaction, mate')

        def check(reaction, user):
            return user == message.author and str(reaction.emoji) == '👍'

        try:
            reaction, user = await client.wait_for('reaction_add', timeout=60.0, check=check)
        except asyncio.TimeoutError:
            await channel.send('👎')
        else:
            await channel.send('👍')
Parameters:
  • event (str) – The event name, similar to the event reference, but without the on_ prefix, to wait for.

  • check (Optional[Callable[…, bool]]) – A predicate to check what to wait for. The arguments must meet the parameters of the event being waited for.

  • timeout (Optional[float]) – The number of seconds to wait before timing out and raising asyncio.TimeoutError.

Raises:

asyncio.TimeoutError – If a timeout is provided and it was reached.

Returns:

Returns no arguments, a single argument, or a tuple of multiple arguments that mirrors the parameters passed in the event reference.

Return type:

Any

await wait_until_ready()

This function is a coroutine.

Waits until the client’s internal cache is all ready.

for ... in walk_commands()

An iterator that recursively walks through all commands and subcommands.

Changed in version 1.4: Duplicates due to aliases are no longer returned

Yields:

Union[Command, Group] – A command or group from the internal list of commands.

AutoShardedBot

class nextcord.ext.commands.AutoShardedBot(command_prefix=(), help_command=..., description=None, *, max_messages=1000, connector=None, proxy=None, proxy_auth=None, shard_id=None, shard_count=None, shard_ids=None, application_id=None, intents=<Intents value=3243773>, member_cache_flags=..., chunk_guilds_at_startup=..., status=None, activity=None, allowed_mentions=None, heartbeat_timeout=60.0, guild_ready_timeout=2.0, assume_unsync_clock=True, enable_debug_events=False, loop=None, lazy_load_commands=True, rollout_associate_known=True, rollout_delete_unknown=True, rollout_register_new=True, rollout_update_known=True, rollout_all_guilds=False, default_guild_ids=None, owner_id=None, owner_ids=None, strip_after_prefix=False, case_insensitive=False)

This is similar to Bot except that it is inherited from nextcord.AutoShardedClient instead.

Prefix Helpers

nextcord.ext.commands.when_mentioned(bot, msg)

A callable that implements a command prefix equivalent to being mentioned.

These are meant to be passed into the Bot.command_prefix attribute.

nextcord.ext.commands.when_mentioned_or(*prefixes)

A callable that implements when mentioned or other prefixes provided.

These are meant to be passed into the Bot.command_prefix attribute.

Example

bot = commands.Bot(command_prefix=commands.when_mentioned_or('!'))

Note

This callable returns another callable, so if this is done inside a custom callable, you must call the returned callable, for example:

async def get_prefix(bot, message):
    extras = await prefixes_for(message.guild) # returns a list
    return commands.when_mentioned_or(*extras)(bot, message)

See also

when_mentioned()

Event Reference

These events function similar to the regular events, except they are custom to the command extension module.

nextcord.ext.commands.on_command_error(ctx, error)

An error handler that is called when an error is raised inside a command either through user input error, check failure, or an error in your own code.

A default one is provided (Bot.on_command_error()).

Parameters:
  • ctx (Context) – The invocation context.

  • error (CommandError derived) – The error that was raised.

nextcord.ext.commands.on_command(ctx)

An event that is called when a command is found and is about to be invoked.

This event is called regardless of whether the command itself succeeds via error or completes.

Parameters:

ctx (Context) – The invocation context.

nextcord.ext.commands.on_command_completion(ctx)

An event that is called when a command has completed its invocation.

This event is called only if the command succeeded, i.e. all checks have passed and the user input it correctly.

Parameters:

ctx (Context) – The invocation context.

Commands

Decorators

@nextcord.ext.commands.command(name=..., cls=..., **attrs)

A decorator that transforms a function into a Command or if called with group(), Group.

By default the help attribute is received automatically from the docstring of the function and is cleaned up with the use of inspect.cleandoc. If the docstring is bytes, then it is decoded into str using utf-8 encoding.

All checks added using the check() & co. decorators are added into the function. There is no way to supply your own checks through this decorator.

Parameters:
  • name (str) – The name to create the command with. By default this uses the function name unchanged.

  • cls – The class to construct with. By default this is Command. You usually do not change this.

  • attrs – Keyword arguments to pass into the construction of the class denoted by cls.

Raises:

TypeError – If the function is not a coroutine or is already a command.

@nextcord.ext.commands.group(name=..., cls=..., **attrs)

A decorator that transforms a function into a Group.

This is similar to the command() decorator but the cls parameter is set to Group by default.

Changed in version 1.1: The cls parameter can now be passed.

Command

class nextcord.ext.commands.Command(*args, **kwargs)

A class that implements the protocol for a bot text command.

These are not created manually, instead they are created via the decorator or functional interface.

name

The name of the command.

Type:

str

callback

The coroutine that is executed when the command is called.

Type:

coroutine

help

The long help text for the command.

Type:

Optional[str]

brief

The short help text for the command.

Type:

Optional[str]

usage

A replacement for arguments in the default help text.

Type:

Optional[str]

aliases

The list of aliases the command can be invoked under.

Type:

Union[List[str], Tuple[str]]

enabled

A boolean that indicates if the command is currently enabled. If the command is invoked while it is disabled, then DisabledCommand is raised to the on_command_error() event. Defaults to True.

Type:

bool

parent

The parent group that this command belongs to. None if there isn’t one.

Type:

Optional[Group]

cog

The cog that this command belongs to. None if there isn’t one.

Type:

Optional[Cog]

checks

A list of predicates that verifies if the command could be executed with the given Context as the sole parameter. If an exception is necessary to be thrown to signal failure, then one inherited from CommandError should be used. Note that if the checks fail then CheckFailure exception is raised to the on_command_error() event.

Type:

List[Callable[[Context], bool]]

description

The message prefixed into the default help command.

Type:

str

hidden

If True, the default help command does not show this in the help output.

Type:

bool

rest_is_raw

If False and a keyword-only argument is provided then the keyword only argument is stripped and handled as if it was a regular argument that handles MissingRequiredArgument and default values in a regular matter rather than passing the rest completely raw. If True then the keyword-only argument will pass in the rest of the arguments in a completely raw matter. Defaults to False.

Type:

bool

invoked_subcommand

The subcommand that was invoked, if any.

Type:

Optional[Command]

require_var_positional

If True and a variadic positional argument is specified, requires the user to specify at least one argument. Defaults to False.

New in version 1.5.

Type:

bool

ignore_extra

If True, ignores extraneous strings passed to a command if all its requirements are met (e.g. ?foo a b c when only expecting a and b). Otherwise on_command_error() and local error handlers are called with TooManyArguments. Defaults to True.

Type:

bool

cooldown_after_parsing

If True, cooldown processing is done after argument parsing, which calls converters. If False then cooldown processing is done first and then the converters are called second. Defaults to False.

Type:

bool

extras

A dict of user provided extras to attach to the Command.

Note

This object may be copied by the library.

New in version 2.0.

Type:

dict

inherit_hooks

If True and this command has a parent Group then this command will inherit all checks, pre_invoke and after_invoke’s defined on the the Group This defaults to False

Note

Any pre_invoke or after_invoke’s defined on this will override parent ones.

New in version 2.0.0.

Type:

bool

@after_invoke

A decorator that registers a coroutine as a post-invoke hook.

A post-invoke hook is called directly after the command is called. This makes it a useful function to clean-up database connections or any type of clean up required.

This post-invoke hook takes a sole parameter, a Context.

See Bot.after_invoke() for more info.

Parameters:

coro (coroutine) – The coroutine to register as the post-invoke hook.

Raises:

TypeError – The coroutine passed is not actually a coroutine.

@before_invoke

A decorator that registers a coroutine as a pre-invoke hook.

A pre-invoke hook is called directly before the command is called. This makes it a useful function to set up database connections or any type of set up required.

This pre-invoke hook takes a sole parameter, a Context.

See Bot.before_invoke() for more info.

Parameters:

coro (coroutine) – The coroutine to register as the pre-invoke hook.

Raises:

TypeError – The coroutine passed is not actually a coroutine.

@error

A decorator that registers a coroutine as a local error handler.

A local error handler is an on_command_error() event limited to a single command. However, the on_command_error() is still invoked afterwards as the catch-all.

Parameters:

coro (coroutine) – The coroutine to register as the local error handler.

Raises:

TypeError – The coroutine passed is not actually a coroutine.

add_check(func)

Adds a check to the command.

This is the non-decorator interface to check().

New in version 1.3.

Parameters:

func – The function that will be used as a check.

remove_check(func)

Removes a check from the command.

This function is idempotent and will not raise an exception if the function is not in the command’s checks.

New in version 1.3.

Parameters:

func – The function to remove from the checks.

update(**kwargs)

Updates Command instance with updated attribute.

This works similarly to the command() decorator in terms of parameters in that they are passed to the Command or subclass constructors, sans the name and callback.

await __call__(context, *args, **kwargs)

This function is a coroutine.

Calls the internal callback that the command holds.

Note

This bypasses all mechanisms – including checks, converters, invoke hooks, cooldowns, etc. You must take care to pass the proper arguments and types to this function.

New in version 1.3.

copy()

Creates a copy of this command.

Returns:

A new instance of this command.

Return type:

Command

property clean_params

Dict[str, inspect.Parameter]: Retrieves the parameter dictionary without the context or self parameters.

Useful for inspecting signature.

property full_parent_name

Retrieves the fully qualified parent command name.

This the base command name required to execute it. For example, in ?one two three the parent name would be one two.

Type:

str

property parents

Retrieves the parents of this command.

If the command has no parents then it returns an empty list.

For example in commands ?a b c test, the parents are [c, b, a].

New in version 1.1.

Type:

List[Group]

property root_parent

Retrieves the root parent of this command.

If the command has no parents then it returns None.

For example in commands ?a b c test, the root parent is a.

Type:

Optional[Group]

property qualified_name

Retrieves the fully qualified command name.

This is the full parent name with the command name as well. For example, in ?one two three the qualified name would be one two three.

Type:

str

is_on_cooldown(ctx)

Checks whether the command is currently on cooldown.

Parameters:

ctx (Context) – The invocation context to use when checking the commands cooldown status.

Returns:

A boolean indicating if the command is on cooldown.

Return type:

bool

reset_cooldown(ctx)

Resets the cooldown on this command.

Parameters:

ctx (Context) – The invocation context to reset the cooldown under.

get_cooldown_retry_after(ctx)

Retrieves the amount of seconds before this command can be tried again.

New in version 1.4.

Parameters:

ctx (Context) – The invocation context to retrieve the cooldown from.

Returns:

The amount of time left on this command’s cooldown in seconds. If this is 0.0 then the command isn’t on cooldown.

Return type:

float

has_error_handler()

bool: Checks whether the command has an error handler registered.

New in version 1.7.

property cog_name

The name of the cog this command belongs to, if any.

Type:

Optional[str]

property short_doc

Gets the “short” documentation of a command.

By default, this is the brief attribute. If that lookup leads to an empty string then the first line of the help attribute is used instead.

Type:

str

property signature

Returns a POSIX-like signature useful for help command output.

Type:

str

await can_run(ctx)

This function is a coroutine.

Checks if the command can be executed by checking all the predicates inside the checks attribute. This also checks whether the command is disabled.

Changed in version 1.3: Checks whether the command is disabled or not

Parameters:

ctx (Context) – The ctx of the command currently being invoked.

Raises:

CommandError – Any command error that was raised during a check call will be propagated by this function.

Returns:

A boolean indicating if the command can be invoked.

Return type:

bool

Group

class nextcord.ext.commands.Group(*args, **kwargs)

A class that implements a grouping protocol for commands to be executed as subcommands.

This class is a subclass of Command and thus all options valid in Command are valid in here as well.

invoke_without_command

Indicates if the group callback should begin parsing and invocation only if no subcommand was found. Useful for making it an error handling function to tell the user that no subcommand was found or to have different functionality in case no subcommand was found. If this is False, then the group callback will always be invoked first. This means that the checks and the parsing dictated by its parameters will be executed. Defaults to False.

Type:

bool

case_insensitive

Indicates if the group’s commands should be case insensitive. Defaults to False.

Type:

bool

@after_invoke

A decorator that registers a coroutine as a post-invoke hook.

A post-invoke hook is called directly after the command is called. This makes it a useful function to clean-up database connections or any type of clean up required.

This post-invoke hook takes a sole parameter, a Context.

See Bot.after_invoke() for more info.

Parameters:

coro (coroutine) – The coroutine to register as the post-invoke hook.

Raises:

TypeError – The coroutine passed is not actually a coroutine.

@before_invoke

A decorator that registers a coroutine as a pre-invoke hook.

A pre-invoke hook is called directly before the command is called. This makes it a useful function to set up database connections or any type of set up required.

This pre-invoke hook takes a sole parameter, a Context.

See Bot.before_invoke() for more info.

Parameters:

coro (coroutine) – The coroutine to register as the pre-invoke hook.

Raises:

TypeError – The coroutine passed is not actually a coroutine.

@command(*args, **kwargs)

A shortcut decorator that invokes command() and adds it to the internal command list via add_command().

Returns:

A decorator that converts the provided method into a Command, adds it to the bot, then returns it.

Return type:

Callable[…, Command]

@error

A decorator that registers a coroutine as a local error handler.

A local error handler is an on_command_error() event limited to a single command. However, the on_command_error() is still invoked afterwards as the catch-all.

Parameters:

coro (coroutine) – The coroutine to register as the local error handler.

Raises:

TypeError – The coroutine passed is not actually a coroutine.

@group(*args, **kwargs)

A shortcut decorator that invokes group() and adds it to the internal command list via add_command().

Returns:

A decorator that converts the provided method into a Group, adds it to the bot, then returns it.

Return type:

Callable[…, Group]

copy()

Creates a copy of this Group.

Returns:

A new instance of this group.

Return type:

Group

add_check(func)

Adds a check to the command.

This is the non-decorator interface to check().

New in version 1.3.

Parameters:

func – The function that will be used as a check.

add_command(command)

Adds a Command into the internal list of commands.

This is usually not called, instead the command() or group() shortcut decorators are used instead.

Changed in version 1.4: Raise CommandRegistrationError instead of generic ClientException

Parameters:

command (Command) – The command to add.

Raises:
  • .CommandRegistrationError – If the command or its alias is already registered by different command.

  • TypeError – If the command passed is not a subclass of Command.

await can_run(ctx)

This function is a coroutine.

Checks if the command can be executed by checking all the predicates inside the checks attribute. This also checks whether the command is disabled.

Changed in version 1.3: Checks whether the command is disabled or not

Parameters:

ctx (Context) – The ctx of the command currently being invoked.

Raises:

CommandError – Any command error that was raised during a check call will be propagated by this function.

Returns:

A boolean indicating if the command can be invoked.

Return type:

bool

property clean_params

Dict[str, inspect.Parameter]: Retrieves the parameter dictionary without the context or self parameters.

Useful for inspecting signature.

property cog_name

The name of the cog this command belongs to, if any.

Type:

Optional[str]

property commands

A unique set of commands without aliases that are registered.

Type:

Set[Command]

property full_parent_name

Retrieves the fully qualified parent command name.

This the base command name required to execute it. For example, in ?one two three the parent name would be one two.

Type:

str

get_command(name)

Get a Command from the internal list of commands.

This could also be used as a way to get aliases.

The name could be fully qualified (e.g. 'foo bar') will get the subcommand bar of the group command foo. If a subcommand is not found then None is returned just as usual.

Parameters:

name (str) – The name of the command to get.

Returns:

The command that was requested. If not found, returns None.

Return type:

Optional[Command]

get_cooldown_retry_after(ctx)

Retrieves the amount of seconds before this command can be tried again.

New in version 1.4.

Parameters:

ctx (Context) – The invocation context to retrieve the cooldown from.

Returns:

The amount of time left on this command’s cooldown in seconds. If this is 0.0 then the command isn’t on cooldown.

Return type:

float

has_error_handler()

bool: Checks whether the command has an error handler registered.

New in version 1.7.

is_on_cooldown(ctx)

Checks whether the command is currently on cooldown.

Parameters:

ctx (Context) – The invocation context to use when checking the commands cooldown status.

Returns:

A boolean indicating if the command is on cooldown.

Return type:

bool

property parents

Retrieves the parents of this command.

If the command has no parents then it returns an empty list.

For example in commands ?a b c test, the parents are [c, b, a].

New in version 1.1.

Type:

List[Group]

property qualified_name

Retrieves the fully qualified command name.

This is the full parent name with the command name as well. For example, in ?one two three the qualified name would be one two three.

Type:

str

remove_check(func)

Removes a check from the command.

This function is idempotent and will not raise an exception if the function is not in the command’s checks.

New in version 1.3.

Parameters:

func – The function to remove from the checks.

remove_command(name)

Remove a Command from the internal list of commands.

This could also be used as a way to remove aliases.

Parameters:

name (str) – The name of the command to remove.

Returns:

The command that was removed. If the name is not valid then None is returned instead.

Return type:

Optional[Command]

reset_cooldown(ctx)

Resets the cooldown on this command.

Parameters:

ctx (Context) – The invocation context to reset the cooldown under.

property root_parent

Retrieves the root parent of this command.

If the command has no parents then it returns None.

For example in commands ?a b c test, the root parent is a.

Type:

Optional[Group]

property short_doc

Gets the “short” documentation of a command.

By default, this is the brief attribute. If that lookup leads to an empty string then the first line of the help attribute is used instead.

Type:

str

property signature

Returns a POSIX-like signature useful for help command output.

Type:

str

update(**kwargs)

Updates Command instance with updated attribute.

This works similarly to the command() decorator in terms of parameters in that they are passed to the Command or subclass constructors, sans the name and callback.

for ... in walk_commands()

An iterator that recursively walks through all commands and subcommands.

Changed in version 1.4: Duplicates due to aliases are no longer returned

Yields:

Union[Command, Group] – A command or group from the internal list of commands.

GroupMixin

class nextcord.ext.commands.GroupMixin(*args, case_insensitive=False, **kwargs)

A mixin that implements common functionality for classes that behave similar to Group and are allowed to register commands.

all_commands

A mapping of command name to Command objects.

Type:

dict

case_insensitive

Whether the commands should be case insensitive. Defaults to False.

Type:

bool

@command(*args, **kwargs)

A shortcut decorator that invokes command() and adds it to the internal command list via add_command().

Returns:

A decorator that converts the provided method into a Command, adds it to the bot, then returns it.

Return type:

Callable[…, Command]

@group(*args, **kwargs)

A shortcut decorator that invokes group() and adds it to the internal command list via add_command().

Returns:

A decorator that converts the provided method into a Group, adds it to the bot, then returns it.

Return type:

Callable[…, Group]

property commands

A unique set of commands without aliases that are registered.

Type:

Set[Command]

add_command(command)

Adds a Command into the internal list of commands.

This is usually not called, instead the command() or group() shortcut decorators are used instead.

Changed in version 1.4: Raise CommandRegistrationError instead of generic ClientException

Parameters:

command (Command) – The command to add.

Raises:
  • .CommandRegistrationError – If the command or its alias is already registered by different command.

  • TypeError – If the command passed is not a subclass of Command.

remove_command(name)

Remove a Command from the internal list of commands.

This could also be used as a way to remove aliases.

Parameters:

name (str) – The name of the command to remove.

Returns:

The command that was removed. If the name is not valid then None is returned instead.

Return type:

Optional[Command]

for ... in walk_commands()

An iterator that recursively walks through all commands and subcommands.

Changed in version 1.4: Duplicates due to aliases are no longer returned

Yields:

Union[Command, Group] – A command or group from the internal list of commands.

get_command(name)

Get a Command from the internal list of commands.

This could also be used as a way to get aliases.

The name could be fully qualified (e.g. 'foo bar') will get the subcommand bar of the group command foo. If a subcommand is not found then None is returned just as usual.

Parameters:

name (str) – The name of the command to get.

Returns:

The command that was requested. If not found, returns None.

Return type:

Optional[Command]

Cogs

Cog

class nextcord.ext.commands.Cog(*args, **kwargs)

The base class that all cogs must inherit from.

A cog is a collection of commands, listeners, and optional state to help group commands together. More information on them can be found on the Cogs page.

When inheriting from this class, the options shown in CogMeta are equally valid here.

get_commands()
Returns:

A list of Commands that are defined inside this cog.

Note

This does not include subcommands.

Return type:

List[Command]

property qualified_name

Returns the cog’s specified name, not the class name.

Type:

str

property description

Returns the cog’s description, typically the cleaned docstring.

Type:

str

for ... in walk_commands()

An iterator that recursively walks through this cog’s commands and subcommands.

Yields:

Union[Command, Group] – A command or group from the cog.

get_listeners()

Returns a list of (name, function) listener pairs that are defined in this cog.

Returns:

The listeners defined in this cog.

Return type:

List[Tuple[str, coroutine]]

classmethod listener(name=...)

A decorator that marks a function as a listener.

This is the cog equivalent of Bot.listen().

Parameters:

name (str) – The name of the event being listened to. If not provided, it defaults to the function’s name.

Raises:

TypeError – The function is not a coroutine function or a string was not passed as the name.

has_error_handler()

bool: Checks whether the cog has an error handler.

New in version 1.7.

cog_unload()

A special method that is called when the cog gets removed.

This function cannot be a coroutine. It must be a regular function.

Subclasses must replace this if they want special unloading behaviour.

bot_check_once(ctx)

A special method that registers as a Bot.check_once() check.

This function can be a coroutine and must take a sole parameter, ctx, to represent the Context.

bot_check(ctx)

A special method that registers as a Bot.check() check.

This function can be a coroutine and must take a sole parameter, ctx, to represent the Context.

cog_check(ctx)

A special method that registers as a check() for every command and subcommand in this cog.

This function can be a coroutine and must take a sole parameter, ctx, to represent the Context.

await cog_command_error(ctx, error)

A special method that is called whenever an error is dispatched inside this cog.

This is similar to on_command_error() except only applying to the commands inside this cog.

This must be a coroutine.

Note

This is only called for prefix commands.

Parameters:
  • ctx (Context) – The invocation context where the error happened.

  • error (CommandError) – The error that happened.

await cog_before_invoke(ctx)

A special method that acts as a cog local pre-invoke hook.

This is similar to Command.before_invoke().

This must be a coroutine.

Parameters:

ctx (Context) – The invocation context.

await cog_after_invoke(ctx)

A special method that acts as a cog local post-invoke hook.

This is similar to Command.after_invoke().

This must be a coroutine.

Parameters:

ctx (Context) – The invocation context.

CogMeta

class nextcord.ext.commands.CogMeta(*args, **kwargs)

A metaclass for defining a cog.

Note that you should probably not use this directly. It is exposed purely for documentation purposes along with making custom metaclasses to intermix with other metaclasses such as the abc.ABCMeta metaclass.

For example, to create an abstract cog mixin class, the following would be done.

import abc

class CogABCMeta(commands.CogMeta, abc.ABCMeta):
    pass

class SomeMixin(metaclass=abc.ABCMeta):
    pass

class SomeCogMixin(SomeMixin, commands.Cog, metaclass=CogABCMeta):
    pass

Note

When passing an attribute of a metaclass that is documented below, note that you must pass it as a keyword-only argument to the class creation like the following example:

class MyCog(commands.Cog, name='My Cog'):
    pass
name

The cog name. By default, it is the name of the class with no modification.

Type:

str

description

The cog description. By default, it is the cleaned docstring of the class.

New in version 1.6.

Type:

str

command_attrs

A list of attributes to apply to every command inside this cog. The dictionary is passed into the Command options at __init__. If you specify attributes inside the command attribute in the class, it will override the one specified inside this attribute. For example:

class MyCog(commands.Cog, command_attrs=dict(hidden=True)):
    @commands.command()
    async def foo(self, ctx):
        pass # hidden -> True

    @commands.command(hidden=False)
    async def bar(self, ctx):
        pass # hidden -> False
Type:

dict

Help Commands

HelpCommand

class nextcord.ext.commands.HelpCommand(*args, **kwargs)

The base implementation for help command formatting.

Note

Internally instances of this class are deep copied every time the command itself is invoked to prevent a race condition mentioned in GH-2123.

This means that relying on the state of this class to be the same between command invocations would not work as expected.

context

The context that invoked this help formatter. This is generally set after the help command assigned, command_callback(), has been called.

Type:

Optional[Context]

show_hidden

Specifies if hidden commands should be shown in the output. Defaults to False.

Type:

bool

verify_checks

Specifies if commands should have their Command.checks called and verified. If True, always calls Command.checks. If None, only calls Command.checks in a guild setting. If False, never calls Command.checks. Defaults to True.

Changed in version 1.7.

Type:

Optional[bool]

command_attrs

A dictionary of options to pass in for the construction of the help command. This allows you to change the command behaviour without actually changing the implementation of the command. The attributes will be the same as the ones passed in the Command constructor.

Type:

dict

add_check(func)

Adds a check to the help command.

New in version 1.4.

Parameters:

func – The function that will be used as a check.

remove_check(func)

Removes a check from the help command.

This function is idempotent and will not raise an exception if the function is not in the command’s checks.

New in version 1.4.

Parameters:

func – The function to remove from the checks.

get_bot_mapping()

Retrieves the bot mapping passed to send_bot_help().

property invoked_with

Similar to Context.invoked_with except properly handles the case where Context.send_help() is used.

If the help command was used regularly then this returns the Context.invoked_with attribute. Otherwise, if it the help command was called using Context.send_help() then it returns the internal command name of the help command.

Returns:

The command name that triggered this invocation.

Return type:

str

get_command_signature(command)

Retrieves the signature portion of the help page.

Parameters:

command (Command) – The command to get the signature of.

Returns:

The signature for the command.

Return type:

str

remove_mentions(string)

Removes mentions from the string to prevent abuse.

This includes @everyone, @here, member mentions and role mentions.

Returns:

The string with mentions removed.

Return type:

str

property cog

A property for retrieving or setting the cog for the help command.

When a cog is set for the help command, it is as-if the help command belongs to that cog. All cog special methods will apply to the help command and it will be automatically unset on unload.

To unbind the cog from the help command, you can set it to None.

Returns:

The cog that is currently set for the help command.

Return type:

Optional[Cog]

command_not_found(string)

This function could be a coroutine.

A method called when a command is not found in the help command. This is useful to override for i18n.

Defaults to No command called {0} found.

Parameters:

string (str) – The string that contains the invalid command. Note that this has had mentions removed to prevent abuse.

Returns:

The string to use when a command has not been found.

Return type:

str

subcommand_not_found(command, string)

This function could be a coroutine.

A method called when a command did not have a subcommand requested in the help command. This is useful to override for i18n.

Defaults to either:

  • 'Command "{command.qualified_name}" has no subcommands.'
    • If there is no subcommand in the command parameter.

  • 'Command "{command.qualified_name}" has no subcommand named {string}'
    • If the command parameter has subcommands but not one named string.

Parameters:
  • command (Command) – The command that did not have the subcommand requested.

  • string (str) – The string that contains the invalid subcommand. Note that this has had mentions removed to prevent abuse.

Returns:

The string to use when the command did not have the subcommand requested.

Return type:

str

await filter_commands(commands, *, sort=False, key=None)

This function is a coroutine.

Returns a filtered list of commands and optionally sorts them.

This takes into account the verify_checks and show_hidden attributes.

Parameters:
  • commands (Iterable[Command]) – An iterable of commands that are getting filtered.

  • sort (bool) – Whether to sort the result.

  • key (Optional[Callable[Command, Any]]) – An optional key function to pass to sorted() that takes a Command as its sole parameter. If sort is passed as True then this will default as the command name.

Returns:

A list of commands that passed the filter.

Return type:

List[Command]

get_max_size(commands)

Returns the largest name length of the specified command list.

Parameters:

commands (Sequence[Command]) – A sequence of commands to check for the largest size.

Returns:

The maximum width of the commands.

Return type:

int

get_destination()

Returns the Messageable where the help command will be output.

You can override this method to customise the behaviour.

By default this returns the context’s channel.

Returns:

The destination where the help command will be output.

Return type:

abc.Messageable

await send_error_message(error)

This function is a coroutine.

Handles the implementation when an error happens in the help command. For example, the result of command_not_found() will be passed here.

You can override this method to customise the behaviour.

By default, this sends the error message to the destination specified by get_destination().

Note

You can access the invocation context with HelpCommand.context.

Parameters:

error (str) – The error message to display to the user. Note that this has had mentions removed to prevent abuse.

await on_help_command_error(ctx, error)

This function is a coroutine.

The help command’s error handler, as specified by Error Handling.

Useful to override if you need some specific behaviour when the error handler is called.

By default this method does nothing and just propagates to the default error handlers.

Parameters:
  • ctx (Context) – The invocation context.

  • error (CommandError) – The error that was raised.

await send_bot_help(mapping)

This function is a coroutine.

Handles the implementation of the bot command page in the help command. This function is called when the help command is called with no arguments.

It should be noted that this method does not return anything – rather the actual message sending should be done inside this method. Well behaved subclasses should use get_destination() to know where to send, as this is a customisation point for other users.

You can override this method to customise the behaviour.

Note

You can access the invocation context with HelpCommand.context.

Also, the commands in the mapping are not filtered. To do the filtering you will have to call filter_commands() yourself.

Parameters:

mapping (Mapping[Optional[Cog], List[Command]]) – A mapping of cogs to commands that have been requested by the user for help. The key of the mapping is the Cog that the command belongs to, or None if there isn’t one, and the value is a list of commands that belongs to that cog.

await send_cog_help(cog)

This function is a coroutine.

Handles the implementation of the cog page in the help command. This function is called when the help command is called with a cog as the argument.

It should be noted that this method does not return anything – rather the actual message sending should be done inside this method. Well behaved subclasses should use get_destination() to know where to send, as this is a customisation point for other users.

You can override this method to customise the behaviour.

Note

You can access the invocation context with HelpCommand.context.

To get the commands that belong to this cog see Cog.get_commands(). The commands returned not filtered. To do the filtering you will have to call filter_commands() yourself.

Parameters:

cog (Cog) – The cog that was requested for help.

await send_group_help(group)

This function is a coroutine.

Handles the implementation of the group page in the help command. This function is called when the help command is called with a group as the argument.

It should be noted that this method does not return anything – rather the actual message sending should be done inside this method. Well behaved subclasses should use get_destination() to know where to send, as this is a customisation point for other users.

You can override this method to customise the behaviour.

Note

You can access the invocation context with HelpCommand.context.

To get the commands that belong to this group without aliases see Group.commands. The commands returned not filtered. To do the filtering you will have to call filter_commands() yourself.

Parameters:

group (Group) – The group that was requested for help.

await send_command_help(command)

This function is a coroutine.

Handles the implementation of the single command page in the help command.

It should be noted that this method does not return anything – rather the actual message sending should be done inside this method. Well behaved subclasses should use get_destination() to know where to send, as this is a customisation point for other users.

You can override this method to customise the behaviour.

Note

You can access the invocation context with HelpCommand.context.

Showing Help

There are certain attributes and methods that are helpful for a help command to show such as the following:

There are more than just these attributes but feel free to play around with these to help you get started to get the output that you want.

Parameters:

command (Command) – The command that was requested for help.

await prepare_help_command(ctx, command=None)

This function is a coroutine.

A low level method that can be used to prepare the help command before it does anything. For example, if you need to prepare some state in your subclass before the command does its processing then this would be the place to do it.

The default implementation does nothing.

Note

This is called inside the help command callback body. So all the usual rules that happen inside apply here as well.

Parameters:
  • ctx (Context) – The invocation context.

  • command (Optional[str]) – The argument passed to the help command.

await command_callback(ctx, *, command=None)

This function is a coroutine.

The actual implementation of the help command.

It is not recommended to override this method and instead change the behaviour through the methods that actually get dispatched.

DefaultHelpCommand

class nextcord.ext.commands.DefaultHelpCommand(*args, **kwargs)

The implementation of the default help command.

This inherits from HelpCommand.

It extends it with the following attributes.

width

The maximum number of characters that fit in a line. Defaults to 80.

Type:

int

sort_commands

Whether to sort the commands in the output alphabetically. Defaults to True.

Type:

bool

dm_help

A tribool that indicates if the help command should DM the user instead of sending it to the channel it received it from. If the boolean is set to True, then all help output is DM’d. If False, none of the help output is DM’d. If None, then the bot will only DM when the help message becomes too long (dictated by more than dm_help_threshold characters). Defaults to False.

Type:

Optional[bool]

dm_help_threshold

The number of characters the paginator must accumulate before getting DM’d to the user if dm_help is set to None. Defaults to 1000.

Type:

Optional[int]

indent

How much to indent the commands from a heading. Defaults to 2.

Type:

int

commands_heading

The command list’s heading string used when the help command is invoked with a category name. Useful for i18n. Defaults to "Commands:"

Type:

str

no_category

The string used when there is a command which does not belong to any category(cog). Useful for i18n. Defaults to "No Category"

Type:

str

paginator

The paginator used to paginate the help command output.

Type:

Paginator

shorten_text(text)

str: Shortens text to fit into the width.

get_ending_note()

str: Returns help command’s ending note. This is mainly useful to override for i18n purposes.

add_indented_commands(commands, *, heading, max_size=None)

Indents a list of commands after the specified heading.

The formatting is added to the paginator.

The default implementation is the command name indented by indent spaces, padded to max_size followed by the command’s Command.short_doc and then shortened to fit into the width.

Parameters:
  • commands (Sequence[Command]) – A list of commands to indent for output.

  • heading (str) – The heading to add to the output. This is only added if the list of commands is greater than 0.

  • max_size (Optional[int]) – The max size to use for the gap between indents. If unspecified, calls get_max_size() on the commands parameter.

await send_pages()

A helper utility to send the page output from paginator to the destination.

add_command_formatting(command)

A utility function to format the non-indented block of commands and groups.

Parameters:

command (Command) – The command to format.

get_destination()

Returns the Messageable where the help command will be output.

You can override this method to customise the behaviour.

By default this returns the context’s channel.

Returns:

The destination where the help command will be output.

Return type:

abc.Messageable

MinimalHelpCommand

class nextcord.ext.commands.MinimalHelpCommand(*args, **kwargs)

An implementation of a help command with minimal output.

This inherits from HelpCommand.

sort_commands

Whether to sort the commands in the output alphabetically. Defaults to True.

Type:

bool

commands_heading

The command list’s heading string used when the help command is invoked with a category name. Useful for i18n. Defaults to "Commands"

Type:

str

aliases_heading

The alias list’s heading string used to list the aliases of the command. Useful for i18n. Defaults to "Aliases:".

Type:

str

dm_help

A tribool that indicates if the help command should DM the user instead of sending it to the channel it received it from. If the boolean is set to True, then all help output is DM’d. If False, none of the help output is DM’d. If None, then the bot will only DM when the help message becomes too long (dictated by more than dm_help_threshold characters). Defaults to False.

Type:

Optional[bool]

dm_help_threshold

The number of characters the paginator must accumulate before getting DM’d to the user if dm_help is set to None. Defaults to 1000.

Type:

Optional[int]

no_category

The string used when there is a command which does not belong to any category(cog). Useful for i18n. Defaults to "No Category"

Type:

str

paginator

The paginator used to paginate the help command output.

Type:

Paginator

await send_pages()

A helper utility to send the page output from paginator to the destination.

get_opening_note()

Returns help command’s opening note. This is mainly useful to override for i18n purposes.

The default implementation returns

Use `{prefix}{command_name} [command]` for more info on a command.
You can also use `{prefix}{command_name} [category]` for more info on a category.
Returns:

The help command opening note.

Return type:

str

get_command_signature(command)

Retrieves the signature portion of the help page.

Parameters:

command (Command) – The command to get the signature of.

Returns:

The signature for the command.

Return type:

str

get_ending_note()

Return the help command’s ending note. This is mainly useful to override for i18n purposes.

The default implementation does nothing.

Returns:

The help command ending note.

Return type:

str

add_bot_commands_formatting(commands, heading)

Adds the minified bot heading with commands to the output.

The formatting should be added to the paginator.

The default implementation is a bold underline heading followed by commands separated by an EN SPACE (U+2002) in the next line.

Parameters:
  • commands (Sequence[Command]) – A list of commands that belong to the heading.

  • heading (str) – The heading to add to the line.

add_subcommand_formatting(command)

Adds formatting information on a subcommand.

The formatting should be added to the paginator.

The default implementation is the prefix and the Command.qualified_name optionally followed by an En dash and the command’s Command.short_doc.

Parameters:

command (Command) – The command to show information of.

add_aliases_formatting(aliases)

Adds the formatting information on a command’s aliases.

The formatting should be added to the paginator.

The default implementation is the aliases_heading bolded followed by a comma separated list of aliases.

This is not called if there are no aliases to format.

Parameters:

aliases (Sequence[str]) – A list of aliases to format.

add_command_formatting(command)

A utility function to format commands and groups.

Parameters:

command (Command) – The command to format.

get_destination()

Returns the Messageable where the help command will be output.

You can override this method to customise the behaviour.

By default this returns the context’s channel.

Returns:

The destination where the help command will be output.

Return type:

abc.Messageable

Paginator

Methods
class nextcord.ext.commands.Paginator(prefix='```', suffix='```', max_size=2000, linesep='\n')

A class that aids in paginating code blocks for Discord messages.

len(x)

Returns the total number of characters in the paginator.

prefix

The prefix inserted to every page. e.g. three backticks.

Type:

str

suffix

The suffix appended at the end of every page. e.g. three backticks.

Type:

str

max_size

The maximum amount of codepoints allowed in a page.

Type:

int

linesep
The character string inserted between lines. e.g. a newline character.

New in version 1.7.

Type:

str

clear()

Clears the paginator to have no pages.

add_line(line='', *, empty=False)

Adds a line to the current page.

If the line exceeds the max_size then an exception is raised.

Parameters:
  • line (str) – The line to add.

  • empty (bool) – Indicates if another empty line should be added.

Raises:

RuntimeError – The line was too big for the current max_size.

close_page()

Prematurely terminate a page.

property pages

Returns the rendered list of pages.

Type:

List[str]

Enums

class nextcord.ext.commands.BucketType

Specifies a type of bucket for, e.g. a cooldown.

default

The default bucket operates on a global basis.

user

The user bucket operates on a per-user basis.

guild

The guild bucket operates on a per-guild basis.

channel

The channel bucket operates on a per-channel basis.

member

The member bucket operates on a per-member basis.

category

The category bucket operates on a per-category basis.

role

The role bucket operates on a per-role basis.

New in version 1.3.

Checks

@nextcord.ext.commands.check(predicate)

A decorator that adds a check to the Command or its subclasses. These checks could be accessed via Command.checks.

These checks should be predicates that take in a single parameter taking a Context. If the check returns a False-like value then during invocation a CheckFailure exception is raised and sent to the on_command_error() event.

If an exception should be thrown in the predicate then it should be a subclass of CommandError. Any exception not subclassed from it will be propagated while those subclassed will be sent to on_command_error().

A special attribute named predicate is bound to the value returned by this decorator to retrieve the predicate passed to the decorator. This allows the following introspection and chaining to be done:

def owner_or_permissions(**perms):
    original = commands.has_permissions(**perms).predicate
    async def extended_check(ctx):
        if ctx.guild is None:
            return False
        return ctx.guild.owner_id == ctx.author.id or await original(ctx)
    return commands.check(extended_check)

Note

The function returned by predicate is always a coroutine, even if the original function was not a coroutine.

Changed in version 1.3: The predicate attribute was added.

Examples

Creating a basic check to see if the command invoker is you.

def check_if_it_is_me(ctx):
    return ctx.message.author.id == 85309593344815104

@bot.command()
@commands.check(check_if_it_is_me)
async def only_for_me(ctx):
    await ctx.send('I know you!')

Transforming common checks into its own decorator:

def is_me():
    def predicate(ctx):
        return ctx.message.author.id == 85309593344815104
    return commands.check(predicate)

@bot.command()
@is_me()
async def only_me(ctx):
    await ctx.send('Only you!')
Parameters:

predicate (Callable[[Context], bool]) – The predicate to check if the command should be invoked.

@nextcord.ext.commands.check_any(*checks)

A check() that is added that checks if any of the checks passed will pass, i.e. using logical OR.

If all checks fail then CheckAnyFailure is raised to signal the failure. It inherits from CheckFailure.

Note

The predicate attribute for this function is a coroutine.

New in version 1.3.

Parameters:

*checks (Callable[[Context], bool]) – An argument list of checks that have been decorated with the check() decorator.

Raises:

TypeError – A check passed has not been decorated with the check() decorator.

Examples

Creating a basic check to see if it’s the bot owner or the server owner:

def is_guild_owner():
    def predicate(ctx):
        return ctx.guild is not None and ctx.guild.owner_id == ctx.author.id
    return commands.check(predicate)

@bot.command()
@commands.check_any(commands.is_owner(), is_guild_owner())
async def only_for_owners(ctx):
    await ctx.send('Hello mister owner!')
@nextcord.ext.commands.has_role(item)

A check() that is added that checks if the member invoking the command has the role specified via the name or ID specified.

If a string is specified, you must give the exact name of the role, including caps and spelling.

If an integer is specified, you must give the exact snowflake ID of the role.

If the message is invoked in a private message context then the check will return False.

This check raises one of two special exceptions, MissingRole if the user is missing a role, or NoPrivateMessage if it is used in a private message. Both inherit from CheckFailure.

Changed in version 1.1: Raise MissingRole or NoPrivateMessage instead of generic CheckFailure

Parameters:

item (Union[int, str]) – The name or ID of the role to check.

@nextcord.ext.commands.has_permissions(**perms)

A check() that is added that checks if the member has all of the permissions necessary.

Note that this check operates on the current channel permissions, not the guild wide permissions.

The permissions passed in must be exactly like the properties shown under nextcord.Permissions.

This check raises a special exception, MissingPermissions that is inherited from CheckFailure.

Parameters:

perms – An argument list of permissions to check for.

Example

@bot.command()
@commands.has_permissions(manage_messages=True)
async def test(ctx):
    await ctx.send('You can manage messages.')
@nextcord.ext.commands.has_guild_permissions(**perms)

Similar to has_permissions(), but operates on guild wide permissions instead of the current channel permissions.

If this check is called in a DM context, it will raise an exception, NoPrivateMessage.

New in version 1.3.

@nextcord.ext.commands.has_any_role(*items)

A check() that is added that checks if the member invoking the command has any of the roles specified. This means that if they have one out of the three roles specified, then this check will return True.

Similar to has_role(), the names or IDs passed in must be exact.

This check raises one of two special exceptions, MissingAnyRole if the user is missing all roles, or NoPrivateMessage if it is used in a private message. Both inherit from CheckFailure.

Changed in version 1.1: Raise MissingAnyRole or NoPrivateMessage instead of generic CheckFailure

Parameters:

items (List[Union[str, int]]) – An argument list of names or IDs to check that the member has roles wise.

Example

@bot.command()
@commands.has_any_role('Library Devs', 'Moderators', 492212595072434186)
async def cool(ctx):
    await ctx.send('You are cool indeed')
@nextcord.ext.commands.bot_has_role(item)

Similar to has_role() except checks if the bot itself has the role.

This check raises one of two special exceptions, BotMissingRole if the bot is missing the role, or NoPrivateMessage if it is used in a private message. Both inherit from CheckFailure.

Changed in version 1.1: Raise BotMissingRole or NoPrivateMessage instead of generic CheckFailure

@nextcord.ext.commands.bot_has_permissions(**perms)

Similar to has_permissions() except checks if the bot itself has the permissions listed.

This check raises a special exception, BotMissingPermissions that is inherited from CheckFailure.

@nextcord.ext.commands.bot_has_guild_permissions(**perms)

Similar to has_guild_permissions(), but checks the bot members guild permissions.

New in version 1.3.

@nextcord.ext.commands.bot_has_any_role(*items)

Similar to has_any_role() except checks if the bot itself has any of the roles listed.

This check raises one of two special exceptions, BotMissingAnyRole if the bot is missing all roles, or NoPrivateMessage if it is used in a private message. Both inherit from CheckFailure.

Changed in version 1.1: Raise BotMissingAnyRole or NoPrivateMessage instead of generic checkfailure

@nextcord.ext.commands.cooldown(rate, per, type=nextcord.ext.commands.BucketType.default)

A decorator that adds a cooldown to a Command

A cooldown allows a command to only be used a specific amount of times in a specific time frame. These cooldowns can be based either on a per-guild, per-channel, per-user, per-role or global basis. Denoted by the third argument of type which must be of enum type BucketType.

If a cooldown is triggered, then CommandOnCooldown is triggered in on_command_error() and the local error handler.

A command can only have a single cooldown.

Parameters:
  • rate (int) – The number of times a command can be used before triggering a cooldown.

  • per (float) – The amount of seconds to wait for a cooldown when it’s been triggered.

  • type (Union[BucketType, Callable[[Message], Any]]) –

    The type of cooldown to have. If callable, should return a key for the mapping.

    Changed in version 1.7: Callables are now supported for custom bucket types.

@nextcord.ext.commands.dynamic_cooldown(cooldown, type=BucketType.default)

A decorator that adds a dynamic cooldown to a Command

This differs from cooldown() in that it takes a function that accepts a single parameter of type nextcord.Message and must return a Cooldown or None. If None is returned then that cooldown is effectively bypassed.

A cooldown allows a command to only be used a specific amount of times in a specific time frame. These cooldowns can be based either on a per-guild, per-channel, per-user, per-role or global basis. Denoted by the third argument of type which must be of enum type BucketType.

If a cooldown is triggered, then CommandOnCooldown is triggered in on_command_error() and the local error handler.

A command can only have a single cooldown.

New in version 2.0.

Parameters:
  • cooldown (Callable[[nextcord.Message], Optional[Cooldown]]) – A function that takes a message and returns a cooldown that will apply to this invocation or None if the cooldown should be bypassed.

  • type (BucketType) – The type of cooldown to have.

@nextcord.ext.commands.max_concurrency(number, per=nextcord.ext.commands.BucketType.default, *, wait=False)

A decorator that adds a maximum concurrency to a Command or its subclasses.

This enables you to only allow a certain number of command invocations at the same time, for example if a command takes too long or if only one user can use it at a time. This differs from a cooldown in that there is no set waiting period or token bucket – only a set number of people can run the command.

New in version 1.3.

Parameters:
  • number (int) – The maximum number of invocations of this command that can be running at the same time.

  • per (BucketType) – The bucket that this concurrency is based on, e.g. BucketType.guild would allow it to be used up to number times per guild.

  • wait (bool) – Whether the command should wait for the queue to be over. If this is set to False then instead of waiting until the command can run again, the command raises MaxConcurrencyReached to its error handler. If this is set to True then the command waits until it can be executed.

@nextcord.ext.commands.before_invoke(coro)

A decorator that registers a coroutine as a pre-invoke hook.

This allows you to refer to one before invoke hook for several commands that do not have to be within the same cog.

New in version 1.4.

Example

async def record_usage(ctx):
    print(ctx.author, 'used', ctx.command, 'at', ctx.message.created_at)

@bot.command()
@commands.before_invoke(record_usage)
async def who(ctx): # Output: <User> used who at <Time>
    await ctx.send('i am a bot')

class What(commands.Cog):

    @commands.before_invoke(record_usage)
    @commands.command()
    async def when(self, ctx): # Output: <User> used when at <Time>
        await ctx.send(f'and i have existed since {ctx.bot.user.created_at}')

    @commands.command()
    async def where(self, ctx): # Output: <Nothing>
        await ctx.send('on Discord')

    @commands.command()
    async def why(self, ctx): # Output: <Nothing>
        await ctx.send('because someone made me')

bot.add_cog(What())
@nextcord.ext.commands.after_invoke(coro)

A decorator that registers a coroutine as a post-invoke hook.

This allows you to refer to one after invoke hook for several commands that do not have to be within the same cog.

New in version 1.4.

@nextcord.ext.commands.guild_only()

A check() that indicates this command must only be used in a guild context only. Basically, no private messages are allowed when using the command.

This check raises a special exception, NoPrivateMessage that is inherited from CheckFailure.

@nextcord.ext.commands.dm_only()

A check() that indicates this command must only be used in a DM context. Only private messages are allowed when using the command.

This check raises a special exception, PrivateMessageOnly that is inherited from CheckFailure.

New in version 1.1.

@nextcord.ext.commands.is_owner()

A check() that checks if the person invoking this command is the owner of the bot.

This is powered by Bot.is_owner().

This check raises a special exception, NotOwner that is derived from CheckFailure.

@nextcord.ext.commands.is_nsfw()

A check() that checks if the channel is a NSFW channel.

This check raises a special exception, NSFWChannelRequired that is derived from CheckFailure.

Changed in version 1.1: Raise NSFWChannelRequired instead of generic CheckFailure. DM channels will also now pass this check.

Cooldown

Attributes
class nextcord.ext.commands.Cooldown(rate, per)

Represents a cooldown for a command.

rate

The total number of tokens available per per seconds.

Type:

int

per

The length of the cooldown period in seconds.

Type:

float

get_tokens(current=None)

Returns the number of available tokens before rate limiting is applied.

Parameters:

current (Optional[float]) – The time in seconds since Unix epoch to calculate tokens at. If not supplied then time.time() is used.

Returns:

The number of tokens available before the cooldown is to be applied.

Return type:

int

get_retry_after(current=None)

Returns the time in seconds until the cooldown will be reset.

Parameters:

current (Optional[float]) – The current time in seconds since Unix epoch. If not supplied, then time.time() is used.

Returns:

The number of seconds to wait before this cooldown will be reset.

Return type:

float

update_rate_limit(current=None)

Updates the cooldown rate limit.

Parameters:

current (Optional[float]) – The time in seconds since Unix epoch to update the rate limit at. If not supplied, then time.time() is used.

Returns:

The retry-after time in seconds if rate limited.

Return type:

Optional[float]

reset()

Reset the cooldown to its initial state.

copy()

Creates a copy of this cooldown.

Returns:

A new instance of this cooldown.

Return type:

Cooldown

Context

class nextcord.ext.commands.Context(*, message, bot, view, args=..., kwargs=..., prefix=None, command=None, invoked_with=None, invoked_parents=..., invoked_subcommand=None, subcommand_passed=None, command_failed=False, current_parameter=None)

Represents the context in which a command is being invoked under.

This class contains a lot of meta data to help you understand more about the invocation context. This class is not created manually and is instead passed around to commands as the first parameter.

This class implements the Messageable ABC.

message

The message that triggered the command being executed.

Type:

Message

bot

The bot that contains the command being executed.

Type:

Bot

args

The list of transformed arguments that were passed into the command. If this is accessed during the on_command_error() event then this list could be incomplete.

Type:

list

kwargs

A dictionary of transformed arguments that were passed into the command. Similar to args, if this is accessed in the on_command_error() event then this dict could be incomplete.

Type:

dict

current_parameter

The parameter that is currently being inspected and converted. This is only of use for within converters.

New in version 2.0.

Type:

Optional[inspect.Parameter]

prefix

The prefix that was used to invoke the command.

Type:

Optional[str]

command

The command that is being invoked currently.

Type:

Optional[Command]

invoked_with

The command name that triggered this invocation. Useful for finding out which alias called the command.

Type:

Optional[str]

invoked_parents

The command names of the parents that triggered this invocation. Useful for finding out which aliases called the command.

For example in commands ?a b c test, the invoked parents are ['a', 'b', 'c'].

New in version 1.7.

Type:

List[str]

invoked_subcommand

The subcommand that was invoked. If no valid subcommand was invoked then this is equal to None.

Type:

Optional[Command]

subcommand_passed

The string that was attempted to call a subcommand. This does not have to point to a valid registered subcommand and could just point to a nonsense string. If nothing was passed to attempt a call to a subcommand then this is set to None.

Type:

Optional[str]

command_failed

A boolean that indicates if the command failed to be parsed, checked, or invoked.

Type:

bool

async for ... in history(*, limit=100, before=None, after=None, around=None, oldest_first=None)

Returns an AsyncIterator that enables receiving the destination’s message history.

You must have read_message_history permissions to use this.

Examples

Usage

counter = 0
async for message in channel.history(limit=200):
    if message.author == client.user:
        counter += 1

Flattening into a list:

messages = await channel.history(limit=123).flatten()
# messages is now a list of Message...

All parameters are optional.

Parameters:
  • limit (Optional[int]) – The number of messages to retrieve. If None, retrieves every message in the channel. Note, however, that this would make it a slow operation.

  • before (Optional[Union[Snowflake, datetime.datetime]]) – Retrieve messages before this date or message. If a datetime is provided, it is recommended to use a UTC aware datetime. If the datetime is naive, it is assumed to be local time.

  • after (Optional[Union[Snowflake, datetime.datetime]]) – Retrieve messages after this date or message. If a datetime is provided, it is recommended to use a UTC aware datetime. If the datetime is naive, it is assumed to be local time.

  • around (Optional[Union[Snowflake, datetime.datetime]]) – Retrieve messages around this date or message. If a datetime is provided, it is recommended to use a UTC aware datetime. If the datetime is naive, it is assumed to be local time. When using this argument, the maximum limit is 101. Note that if the limit is an even number then this will return at most limit + 1 messages.

  • oldest_first (Optional[bool]) – If set to True, return messages in oldest->newest order. Defaults to True if after is specified, otherwise False.

Raises:
  • Forbidden – You do not have permissions to get channel message history.

  • HTTPException – The request to get message history failed.

Yields:

Message – The message with the message data parsed.

async with typing()

Returns a context manager that allows you to type for an indefinite period of time.

This is useful for denoting long computations in your bot.

Note

This is both a regular context manager and an async context manager. This means that both with and async with work with this.

Example Usage:

async with channel.typing():
    # simulate something heavy
    await asyncio.sleep(10)

await channel.send('done!')
await invoke(command, /, *args, **kwargs)

This function is a coroutine.

Calls a command with the arguments given.

This is useful if you want to just call the callback that a Command holds internally.

Note

This does not handle converters, checks, cooldowns, pre-invoke, or after-invoke hooks in any matter. It calls the internal callback directly as-if it was a regular function.

You must take care in passing the proper arguments when using this function.

Parameters:
  • command (Command) – The command that is going to be called.

  • *args – The arguments to use.

  • **kwargs – The keyword arguments to use.

Raises:

TypeError – The command argument to invoke is missing.

await reinvoke(*, call_hooks=False, restart=True)

This function is a coroutine.

Calls the command again.

This is similar to invoke() except that it bypasses checks, cooldowns, and error handlers.

Note

If you want to bypass UserInputError derived exceptions, it is recommended to use the regular invoke() as it will work more naturally. After all, this will end up using the old arguments the user has used and will thus just fail again.

Parameters:
  • call_hooks (bool) – Whether to call the before and after invoke hooks.

  • restart (bool) – Whether to start the call chain from the very beginning or where we left off (i.e. the command that caused the error). The default is to start where we left off.

Raises:

ValueError – The context to reinvoke is not valid.

property valid

Checks if the invocation context is valid to be invoked with.

Type:

bool

property clean_prefix

The cleaned up invoke prefix. i.e. mentions are @name instead of <@id>.

New in version 2.0.

Type:

str

property cog

Returns the cog associated with this context’s command. None if it does not exist.

Type:

Optional[Cog]

guild

Returns the guild associated with this context’s command. None if not available.

Type:

Optional[Guild]

channel

Returns the channel associated with this context’s command. Shorthand for Message.channel.

Type:

Union[abc.Messageable]

author

Union[User, Member]: Returns the author associated with this context’s command. Shorthand for Message.author

me

Union[Member, ClientUser]: Similar to Guild.me except it may return the ClientUser in private message contexts.

property voice_client

A shortcut to Guild.voice_client, if applicable.

Type:

Optional[VoiceProtocol]

await send_help(entity=<bot>)

This function is a coroutine.

Shows the help command for the specified entity if given. The entity can be a command or a cog.

If no entity is given, then it’ll show help for the entire bot.

If the entity is a string, then it looks up whether it’s a Cog or a Command.

Note

Due to the way this function works, instead of returning something similar to command_not_found() this returns None on bad input or no help command.

Parameters:

entity (Optional[Union[Command, Cog, str]]) – The entity to show help for.

Returns:

The result of the help command, if any.

Return type:

Any

await fetch_message(id, /)

This function is a coroutine.

Retrieves a single Message from the destination.

Parameters:

id (int) – The message ID to look for.

Raises:
  • NotFound – The specified message was not found.

  • Forbidden – You do not have the permissions required to get a message.

  • HTTPException – Retrieving the message failed.

Returns:

The message asked for.

Return type:

Message

await reply(content=None, **kwargs)

This function is a coroutine.

A shortcut method to abc.Messageable.send() to reply to the Message.

New in version 1.6.

Raises:
  • HTTPException – Sending the message failed.

  • Forbidden – You do not have the proper permissions to send the message.

  • InvalidArgument – The files list is not of the appropriate size or you specified both file and files.

Returns:

The message that was sent.

Return type:

Message

await send(content=None, *, tts=False, embed=None, embeds=None, file=None, files=None, stickers=None, delete_after=None, nonce=None, allowed_mentions=None, reference=None, mention_author=None, view=None, flags=None, suppress_embeds=None)

This function is a coroutine.

Sends a message to the destination with the content given.

The content must be a type that can convert to a string through str(content). If the content is set to None (the default), then the embed or embeds parameter must be provided.

To upload a single file, the file parameter should be used with a single File object. To upload multiple files, the files parameter should be used with a list of File objects. Specifying both parameters will lead to an exception.

To upload a single embed, the embed parameter should be used with a single Embed object. To upload multiple embeds, the embeds parameter should be used with a list of Embed objects. Specifying both parameters will lead to an exception.

Parameters:
  • content (Optional[str]) – The content of the message to send.

  • tts (bool) – Indicates if the message should be sent using text-to-speech.

  • embed (Embed) – The rich embed for the content.

  • file (File) – The file to upload.

  • files (List[File]) – A list of files to upload. Must be a maximum of 10.

  • nonce (Union[int, str]) – The nonce to use for sending this message. If the message was successfully sent, then the message will have a nonce with this value.

  • delete_after (float) – If provided, the number of seconds to wait in the background before deleting the message we just sent. If the deletion fails, then it is silently ignored.

  • allowed_mentions (AllowedMentions) –

    Controls the mentions being processed in this message. If this is passed, then the object is merged with allowed_mentions. The merging behaviour only overrides attributes that have been explicitly passed to the object, otherwise it uses the attributes set in allowed_mentions. If no object is passed at all then the defaults given by allowed_mentions are used instead.

    New in version 1.4.

  • reference (Union[Message, MessageReference, PartialMessage]) –

    A reference to the Message to which you are replying, this can be created using to_reference() or passed directly as a Message. You can control whether this mentions the author of the referenced message using the replied_user attribute of allowed_mentions or by setting mention_author.

    New in version 1.6.

  • mention_author (Optional[bool]) –

    If set, overrides the replied_user attribute of allowed_mentions.

    New in version 1.6.

  • view (nextcord.ui.View) – A Discord UI View to add to the message.

  • embeds (List[Embed]) –

    A list of embeds to upload. Must be a maximum of 10.

    New in version 2.0.

  • stickers (Sequence[Union[GuildSticker, StickerItem]]) –

    A list of stickers to upload. Must be a maximum of 3.

    New in version 2.0.

  • flags (Optional[MessageFlags]) –

    The message flags being set for this message. Currently only suppress_embeds is able to be set.

    New in version 2.4.

  • suppress_embeds (Optional[bool]) –

    Whether to suppress embeds on this message.

    New in version 2.4.

Raises:
Returns:

The message that was sent.

Return type:

Message

await trigger_typing()

This function is a coroutine.

Triggers a typing indicator to the destination.

Typing indicator will go away after 10 seconds, or after a message is sent.

Converters

class nextcord.ext.commands.Converter(*args, **kwargs)

The base class of custom converters that require the Context to be passed to be useful.

This allows you to implement converters that function similar to the special cased discord classes.

Classes that derive from this should override the convert() method to do its conversion logic. This method must be a coroutine.

await convert(ctx, argument)

This function is a coroutine.

The method to override to do conversion logic.

If an error is found while converting, it is recommended to raise a CommandError derived exception as it will properly propagate to the error handlers.

Parameters:
  • ctx (Context) – The invocation context that the argument is being used in.

  • argument (str) – The argument that is being converted.

Raises:
  • .CommandError – A generic exception occurred when converting the argument.

  • .BadArgument – The converter failed to convert the argument.

class nextcord.ext.commands.ObjectConverter(*args, **kwargs)

Converts to a Object.

The argument must follow the valid ID or mention formats (e.g. <@80088516616269824>).

New in version 2.0.

The lookup strategy is as follows (in order):

  1. Lookup by ID.

  2. Lookup by member, role, or channel mention.

await convert(ctx, argument)

This function is a coroutine.

The method to override to do conversion logic.

If an error is found while converting, it is recommended to raise a CommandError derived exception as it will properly propagate to the error handlers.

Parameters:
  • ctx (Context) – The invocation context that the argument is being used in.

  • argument (str) – The argument that is being converted.

Raises:
  • .CommandError – A generic exception occurred when converting the argument.

  • .BadArgument – The converter failed to convert the argument.

class nextcord.ext.commands.MemberConverter(*args, **kwargs)

Converts to a Member.

All lookups are via the local guild. If in a DM context, then the lookup is done by the global cache.

The lookup strategy is as follows (in order):

  1. Lookup by ID.

  2. Lookup by mention.

  3. Lookup by name#discrim

  4. Lookup by name

  5. Lookup by nickname

Changed in version 1.5: Raise MemberNotFound instead of generic BadArgument

Changed in version 1.5.1: This converter now lazily fetches members from the gateway and HTTP APIs, optionally caching the result if MemberCacheFlags.joined is enabled.

await convert(ctx, argument)

This function is a coroutine.

The method to override to do conversion logic.

If an error is found while converting, it is recommended to raise a CommandError derived exception as it will properly propagate to the error handlers.

Parameters:
  • ctx (Context) – The invocation context that the argument is being used in.

  • argument (str) – The argument that is being converted.

Raises:
  • .CommandError – A generic exception occurred when converting the argument.

  • .BadArgument – The converter failed to convert the argument.

class nextcord.ext.commands.UserConverter(*args, **kwargs)

Converts to a User.

All lookups are via the global user cache.

The lookup strategy is as follows (in order):

  1. Lookup by ID.

  2. Lookup by mention.

  3. Lookup by name#discrim

  4. Lookup by name

Changed in version 1.5: Raise UserNotFound instead of generic BadArgument

Changed in version 1.6: This converter now lazily fetches users from the HTTP APIs if an ID is passed and it’s not available in cache.

await convert(ctx, argument)

This function is a coroutine.

The method to override to do conversion logic.

If an error is found while converting, it is recommended to raise a CommandError derived exception as it will properly propagate to the error handlers.

Parameters:
  • ctx (Context) – The invocation context that the argument is being used in.

  • argument (str) – The argument that is being converted.

Raises:
  • .CommandError – A generic exception occurred when converting the argument.

  • .BadArgument – The converter failed to convert the argument.

class nextcord.ext.commands.MessageConverter(*args, **kwargs)

Converts to a nextcord.Message.

New in version 1.1.

The lookup strategy is as follows (in order):

  1. Lookup by “{channel ID}-{message ID}” (retrieved by shift-clicking on “Copy ID”)

  2. Lookup by message ID (the message must be in the context channel)

  3. Lookup by message URL

Changed in version 1.5: Raise ChannelNotFound, MessageNotFound or ChannelNotReadable instead of generic BadArgument

await convert(ctx, argument)

This function is a coroutine.

The method to override to do conversion logic.

If an error is found while converting, it is recommended to raise a CommandError derived exception as it will properly propagate to the error handlers.

Parameters:
  • ctx (Context) – The invocation context that the argument is being used in.

  • argument (str) – The argument that is being converted.

Raises:
  • .CommandError – A generic exception occurred when converting the argument.

  • .BadArgument – The converter failed to convert the argument.

class nextcord.ext.commands.PartialMessageConverter(*args, **kwargs)

Converts to a nextcord.PartialMessage.

New in version 1.7.

The creation strategy is as follows (in order):

  1. By “{channel ID}-{message ID}” (retrieved by shift-clicking on “Copy ID”)

  2. By message ID (The message is assumed to be in the context channel.)

  3. By message URL

await convert(ctx, argument)

This function is a coroutine.

The method to override to do conversion logic.

If an error is found while converting, it is recommended to raise a CommandError derived exception as it will properly propagate to the error handlers.

Parameters:
  • ctx (Context) – The invocation context that the argument is being used in.

  • argument (str) – The argument that is being converted.

Raises:
  • .CommandError – A generic exception occurred when converting the argument.

  • .BadArgument – The converter failed to convert the argument.

class nextcord.ext.commands.GuildChannelConverter(*args, **kwargs)

Converts to a GuildChannel.

All lookups are via the local guild. If in a DM context, then the lookup is done by the global cache.

The lookup strategy is as follows (in order):

  1. Lookup by ID.

  2. Lookup by mention.

  3. Lookup by name.

New in version 2.0.

await convert(ctx, argument)

This function is a coroutine.

The method to override to do conversion logic.

If an error is found while converting, it is recommended to raise a CommandError derived exception as it will properly propagate to the error handlers.

Parameters:
  • ctx (Context) – The invocation context that the argument is being used in.

  • argument (str) – The argument that is being converted.

Raises:
  • .CommandError – A generic exception occurred when converting the argument.

  • .BadArgument – The converter failed to convert the argument.

class nextcord.ext.commands.TextChannelConverter(*args, **kwargs)

Converts to a TextChannel.

All lookups are via the local guild. If in a DM context, then the lookup is done by the global cache.

The lookup strategy is as follows (in order):

  1. Lookup by ID.

  2. Lookup by mention.

  3. Lookup by name

Changed in version 1.5: Raise ChannelNotFound instead of generic BadArgument

await convert(ctx, argument)

This function is a coroutine.

The method to override to do conversion logic.

If an error is found while converting, it is recommended to raise a CommandError derived exception as it will properly propagate to the error handlers.

Parameters:
  • ctx (Context) – The invocation context that the argument is being used in.

  • argument (str) – The argument that is being converted.

Raises:
  • .CommandError – A generic exception occurred when converting the argument.

  • .BadArgument – The converter failed to convert the argument.

class nextcord.ext.commands.VoiceChannelConverter(*args, **kwargs)

Converts to a VoiceChannel.

All lookups are via the local guild. If in a DM context, then the lookup is done by the global cache.

The lookup strategy is as follows (in order):

  1. Lookup by ID.

  2. Lookup by mention.

  3. Lookup by name

Changed in version 1.5: Raise ChannelNotFound instead of generic BadArgument

await convert(ctx, argument)

This function is a coroutine.

The method to override to do conversion logic.

If an error is found while converting, it is recommended to raise a CommandError derived exception as it will properly propagate to the error handlers.

Parameters:
  • ctx (Context) – The invocation context that the argument is being used in.

  • argument (str) – The argument that is being converted.

Raises:
  • .CommandError – A generic exception occurred when converting the argument.

  • .BadArgument – The converter failed to convert the argument.

class nextcord.ext.commands.StageChannelConverter(*args, **kwargs)

Converts to a StageChannel.

New in version 1.7.

All lookups are via the local guild. If in a DM context, then the lookup is done by the global cache.

The lookup strategy is as follows (in order):

  1. Lookup by ID.

  2. Lookup by mention.

  3. Lookup by name

await convert(ctx, argument)

This function is a coroutine.

The method to override to do conversion logic.

If an error is found while converting, it is recommended to raise a CommandError derived exception as it will properly propagate to the error handlers.

Parameters:
  • ctx (Context) – The invocation context that the argument is being used in.

  • argument (str) – The argument that is being converted.

Raises:
  • .CommandError – A generic exception occurred when converting the argument.

  • .BadArgument – The converter failed to convert the argument.

class nextcord.ext.commands.CategoryChannelConverter(*args, **kwargs)

Converts to a CategoryChannel.

All lookups are via the local guild. If in a DM context, then the lookup is done by the global cache.

The lookup strategy is as follows (in order):

  1. Lookup by ID.

  2. Lookup by mention.

  3. Lookup by name

Changed in version 1.5: Raise ChannelNotFound instead of generic BadArgument

await convert(ctx, argument)

This function is a coroutine.

The method to override to do conversion logic.

If an error is found while converting, it is recommended to raise a CommandError derived exception as it will properly propagate to the error handlers.

Parameters:
  • ctx (Context) – The invocation context that the argument is being used in.

  • argument (str) – The argument that is being converted.

Raises:
  • .CommandError – A generic exception occurred when converting the argument.

  • .BadArgument – The converter failed to convert the argument.

class nextcord.ext.commands.InviteConverter(*args, **kwargs)

Converts to a Invite.

This is done via an HTTP request using Bot.fetch_invite().

Changed in version 1.5: Raise BadInviteArgument instead of generic BadArgument

await convert(ctx, argument)

This function is a coroutine.

The method to override to do conversion logic.

If an error is found while converting, it is recommended to raise a CommandError derived exception as it will properly propagate to the error handlers.

Parameters:
  • ctx (Context) – The invocation context that the argument is being used in.

  • argument (str) – The argument that is being converted.

Raises:
  • .CommandError – A generic exception occurred when converting the argument.

  • .BadArgument – The converter failed to convert the argument.

class nextcord.ext.commands.GuildConverter(*args, **kwargs)

Converts to a Guild.

The lookup strategy is as follows (in order):

  1. Lookup by ID.

  2. Lookup by name. (There is no disambiguation for Guilds with multiple matching names).

New in version 1.7.

await convert(ctx, argument)

This function is a coroutine.

The method to override to do conversion logic.

If an error is found while converting, it is recommended to raise a CommandError derived exception as it will properly propagate to the error handlers.

Parameters:
  • ctx (Context) – The invocation context that the argument is being used in.

  • argument (str) – The argument that is being converted.

Raises:
  • .CommandError – A generic exception occurred when converting the argument.

  • .BadArgument – The converter failed to convert the argument.

class nextcord.ext.commands.RoleConverter(*args, **kwargs)

Converts to a Role.

All lookups are via the local guild. If in a DM context, the converter raises NoPrivateMessage exception.

The lookup strategy is as follows (in order):

  1. Lookup by ID.

  2. Lookup by mention.

  3. Lookup by name

Changed in version 1.5: Raise RoleNotFound instead of generic BadArgument

await convert(ctx, argument)

This function is a coroutine.

The method to override to do conversion logic.

If an error is found while converting, it is recommended to raise a CommandError derived exception as it will properly propagate to the error handlers.

Parameters:
  • ctx (Context) – The invocation context that the argument is being used in.

  • argument (str) – The argument that is being converted.

Raises:
  • .CommandError – A generic exception occurred when converting the argument.

  • .BadArgument – The converter failed to convert the argument.

class nextcord.ext.commands.GameConverter(*args, **kwargs)

Converts to Game.

await convert(ctx, argument)

This function is a coroutine.

The method to override to do conversion logic.

If an error is found while converting, it is recommended to raise a CommandError derived exception as it will properly propagate to the error handlers.

Parameters:
  • ctx (Context) – The invocation context that the argument is being used in.

  • argument (str) – The argument that is being converted.

Raises:
  • .CommandError – A generic exception occurred when converting the argument.

  • .BadArgument – The converter failed to convert the argument.

class nextcord.ext.commands.ColourConverter(*args, **kwargs)

Converts to a Colour.

Changed in version 1.5: Add an alias named ColorConverter

The following formats are accepted:

  • 0x<hex>

  • #<hex>

  • 0x#<hex>

  • rgb(<number>, <number>, <number>)

  • Any of the classmethod in Colour

    • The _ in the name can be optionally replaced with spaces.

Like CSS, <number> can be either 0-255 or 0-100% and <hex> can be either a 6 digit hex number or a 3 digit hex shortcut (e.g. #fff).

Changed in version 1.5: Raise BadColourArgument instead of generic BadArgument

Changed in version 1.7: Added support for rgb function and 3-digit hex shortcuts

await convert(ctx, argument)

This function is a coroutine.

The method to override to do conversion logic.

If an error is found while converting, it is recommended to raise a CommandError derived exception as it will properly propagate to the error handlers.

Parameters:
  • ctx (Context) – The invocation context that the argument is being used in.

  • argument (str) – The argument that is being converted.

Raises:
  • .CommandError – A generic exception occurred when converting the argument.

  • .BadArgument – The converter failed to convert the argument.

class nextcord.ext.commands.EmojiConverter(*args, **kwargs)

Converts to a Emoji.

All lookups are done for the local guild first, if available. If that lookup fails, then it checks the client’s global cache.

The lookup strategy is as follows (in order):

  1. Lookup by ID.

  2. Lookup by extracting ID from the emoji.

  3. Lookup by name

Changed in version 1.5: Raise EmojiNotFound instead of generic BadArgument

await convert(ctx, argument)

This function is a coroutine.

The method to override to do conversion logic.

If an error is found while converting, it is recommended to raise a CommandError derived exception as it will properly propagate to the error handlers.

Parameters:
  • ctx (Context) – The invocation context that the argument is being used in.

  • argument (str) – The argument that is being converted.

Raises:
  • .CommandError – A generic exception occurred when converting the argument.

  • .BadArgument – The converter failed to convert the argument.

class nextcord.ext.commands.PartialEmojiConverter(*args, **kwargs)

Converts to a PartialEmoji.

This is done by extracting the animated flag, name and ID from the emoji.

If the emoji is a unicode emoji, then the name is the unicode character.

Changed in version 1.5: Raise PartialEmojiConversionFailure instead of generic BadArgument

Changed in version 2.1: Add support for converting unicode emojis

await convert(ctx, argument)

This function is a coroutine.

The method to override to do conversion logic.

If an error is found while converting, it is recommended to raise a CommandError derived exception as it will properly propagate to the error handlers.

Parameters:
  • ctx (Context) – The invocation context that the argument is being used in.

  • argument (str) – The argument that is being converted.

Raises:
  • .CommandError – A generic exception occurred when converting the argument.

  • .BadArgument – The converter failed to convert the argument.

class nextcord.ext.commands.ThreadConverter(*args, **kwargs)

Coverts to a Thread.

All lookups are via the local guild.

The lookup strategy is as follows (in order):

  1. Lookup by ID.

  2. Lookup by mention.

  3. Lookup by name.

await convert(ctx, argument)

This function is a coroutine.

The method to override to do conversion logic.

If an error is found while converting, it is recommended to raise a CommandError derived exception as it will properly propagate to the error handlers.

Parameters:
  • ctx (Context) – The invocation context that the argument is being used in.

  • argument (str) – The argument that is being converted.

Raises:
  • .CommandError – A generic exception occurred when converting the argument.

  • .BadArgument – The converter failed to convert the argument.

class nextcord.ext.commands.GuildStickerConverter(*args, **kwargs)

Converts to a GuildSticker.

All lookups are done for the local guild first, if available. If that lookup fails, then it checks the client’s global cache.

The lookup strategy is as follows (in order):

1. Lookup by ID. 3. Lookup by name

New in version 2.0.

await convert(ctx, argument)

This function is a coroutine.

The method to override to do conversion logic.

If an error is found while converting, it is recommended to raise a CommandError derived exception as it will properly propagate to the error handlers.

Parameters:
  • ctx (Context) – The invocation context that the argument is being used in.

  • argument (str) – The argument that is being converted.

Raises:
  • .CommandError – A generic exception occurred when converting the argument.

  • .BadArgument – The converter failed to convert the argument.

class nextcord.ext.commands.clean_content(*, fix_channel_mentions=False, use_nicknames=True, escape_markdown=False, remove_markdown=False)

Converts the argument to mention scrubbed version of said content.

This behaves similarly to clean_content.

fix_channel_mentions

Whether to clean channel mentions.

Type:

bool

use_nicknames

Whether to use nicknames when transforming mentions.

Type:

bool

escape_markdown

Whether to also escape special markdown characters.

Type:

bool

remove_markdown

Whether to also remove special markdown characters. This option is not supported with escape_markdown

New in version 1.7.

Type:

bool

await convert(ctx, argument)

This function is a coroutine.

The method to override to do conversion logic.

If an error is found while converting, it is recommended to raise a CommandError derived exception as it will properly propagate to the error handlers.

Parameters:
  • ctx (Context) – The invocation context that the argument is being used in.

  • argument (str) – The argument that is being converted.

Raises:
  • .CommandError – A generic exception occurred when converting the argument.

  • .BadArgument – The converter failed to convert the argument.

class nextcord.ext.commands.Greedy

A special converter that greedily consumes arguments until it can’t. As a consequence of this behaviour, most input errors are silently discarded, since it is used as an indicator of when to stop parsing.

When a parser error is met the greedy converter stops converting, undoes the internal string parsing routine, and continues parsing regularly.

For example, in the following code:

@commands.command()
async def test(ctx, numbers: Greedy[int], reason: str):
    await ctx.send("numbers: {}, reason: {}".format(numbers, reason))

An invocation of [p]test 1 2 3 4 5 6 hello would pass numbers with [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6] and reason with hello.

For more information, check Special Converters.

await nextcord.ext.commands.run_converters(ctx, converter, argument, param)

This function is a coroutine.

Runs converters for a given converter, argument, and parameter.

This function does the same work that the library does under the hood.

New in version 2.0.

Parameters:
  • ctx (Context) – The invocation context to run the converters under.

  • converter (Any) – The converter to run, this corresponds to the annotation in the function.

  • argument (str) – The argument to convert to.

  • param (inspect.Parameter) – The parameter being converted. This is mainly for error reporting.

Raises:

CommandError – The converter failed to convert.

Returns:

The resulting conversion.

Return type:

Any

Flag Converter

class nextcord.ext.commands.FlagConverter

A converter that allows for a user-friendly flag syntax.

The flags are defined using PEP 526 type annotations similar to the dataclasses Python module. For more information on how this converter works, check the appropriate documentation.

iter(x)

Returns an iterator of (flag_name, flag_value) pairs. This allows it to be, for example, constructed as a dict or a list of pairs. Note that aliases are not shown.

New in version 2.0.

Parameters:
  • case_insensitive (bool) – A class parameter to toggle case insensitivity of the flag parsing. If True then flags are parsed in a case insensitive manner. Defaults to False.

  • prefix (str) – The prefix that all flags must be prefixed with. By default there is no prefix.

  • delimiter (str) – The delimiter that separates a flag’s argument from the flag’s name. By default this is :.

classmethod get_flags()

Dict[str, Flag]: A mapping of flag name to flag object this converter has.

classmethod await convert(ctx, argument)

This function is a coroutine.

The method that actually converters an argument to the flag mapping.

Parameters:
  • cls (Type[FlagConverter]) – The flag converter class.

  • ctx (Context) – The invocation context.

  • argument (str) – The argument to convert from.

Raises:
Returns:

The flag converter instance with all flags parsed.

Return type:

FlagConverter

class nextcord.ext.commands.Flag

Represents a flag parameter for FlagConverter.

The flag() function helps create these flag objects, but it is not necessary to do so. These cannot be constructed manually.

name

The name of the flag.

Type:

str

aliases

The aliases of the flag name.

Type:

List[str]

attribute

The attribute in the class that corresponds to this flag.

Type:

str

default

The default value of the flag, if available.

Type:

Any

annotation

The underlying evaluated annotation of the flag.

Type:

Any

max_args

The maximum number of arguments the flag can accept. A negative value indicates an unlimited amount of arguments.

Type:

int

override

Whether multiple given values overrides the previous value.

Type:

bool

property required

Whether the flag is required.

A required flag has no default value.

Type:

bool

nextcord.ext.commands.flag(*, name=..., aliases=..., default=..., max_args=..., override=...)

Override default functionality and parameters of the underlying FlagConverter class attributes.

Parameters:
  • name (str) – The flag name. If not given, defaults to the attribute name.

  • aliases (List[str]) – Aliases to the flag name. If not given no aliases are set.

  • default (Any) – The default parameter. This could be either a value or a callable that takes Context as its sole parameter. If not given then it defaults to the default value given to the attribute.

  • max_args (int) – The maximum number of arguments the flag can accept. A negative value indicates an unlimited amount of arguments. The default value depends on the annotation given.

  • override (bool) – Whether multiple given values overrides the previous value. The default value depends on the annotation given.

Warnings

class nextcord.ext.commands.MissingMessageContentIntentWarning

Warning category raised when instantiating a Bot with a command_prefix but without the message_content intent enabled.

This warning is not raised when the command_prefix is set to an empty iterable or when_mentioned.

This warning can be silenced using warnings.simplefilter().

import warnings
from nextcord.ext import commands

warnings.simplefilter("ignore", commands.MissingMessageContentIntentWarning)

Exceptions

exception nextcord.ext.commands.CommandError(message=None, *args)

The base exception type for all command related errors.

This inherits from nextcord.DiscordException.

This exception and exceptions inherited from it are handled in a special way as they are caught and passed into a special event from Bot, on_command_error().

exception nextcord.ext.commands.ConversionError(converter, original)

Exception raised when a Converter class raises non-CommandError.

This inherits from CommandError.

converter

The converter that failed.

Type:

nextcord.ext.commands.Converter

original

The original exception that was raised. You can also get this via the __cause__ attribute.

Type:

Exception

exception nextcord.ext.commands.MissingRequiredArgument(param)

Exception raised when parsing a command and a parameter that is required is not encountered.

This inherits from UserInputError

param

The argument that is missing.

Type:

inspect.Parameter

exception nextcord.ext.commands.ArgumentParsingError(message=None, *args)

An exception raised when the parser fails to parse a user’s input.

This inherits from UserInputError.

There are child classes that implement more granular parsing errors for i18n purposes.

exception nextcord.ext.commands.UnexpectedQuoteError(quote)

An exception raised when the parser encounters a quote mark inside a non-quoted string.

This inherits from ArgumentParsingError.

quote

The quote mark that was found inside the non-quoted string.

Type:

str

exception nextcord.ext.commands.InvalidEndOfQuotedStringError(char)

An exception raised when a space is expected after the closing quote in a string but a different character is found.

This inherits from ArgumentParsingError.

char

The character found instead of the expected string.

Type:

str

exception nextcord.ext.commands.ExpectedClosingQuoteError(close_quote)

An exception raised when a quote character is expected but not found.

This inherits from ArgumentParsingError.

close_quote

The quote character expected.

Type:

str

exception nextcord.ext.commands.BadArgument(message=None, *args)

Exception raised when a parsing or conversion failure is encountered on an argument to pass into a command.

This inherits from UserInputError

exception nextcord.ext.commands.BadUnionArgument(param, converters, errors)

Exception raised when a typing.Union converter fails for all its associated types.

This inherits from UserInputError

param

The parameter that failed being converted.

Type:

inspect.Parameter

converters

A tuple of converters attempted in conversion, in order of failure.

Type:

Tuple[Type, ...]

errors

A list of errors that were caught from failing the conversion.

Type:

List[CommandError]

exception nextcord.ext.commands.BadLiteralArgument(param, literals, errors)

Exception raised when a typing.Literal converter fails for all its associated values.

This inherits from UserInputError

New in version 2.0.

param

The parameter that failed being converted.

Type:

inspect.Parameter

literals

A tuple of values compared against in conversion, in order of failure.

Type:

Tuple[Any, ...]

errors

A list of errors that were caught from failing the conversion.

Type:

List[CommandError]

exception nextcord.ext.commands.PrivateMessageOnly(message=None)

Exception raised when an operation does not work outside of private message contexts.

This inherits from CheckFailure

exception nextcord.ext.commands.NoPrivateMessage(message=None)

Exception raised when an operation does not work in private message contexts.

This inherits from CheckFailure

exception nextcord.ext.commands.CheckFailure(message=None, *args)

Exception raised when the predicates in Command.checks have failed.

This inherits from CommandError

exception nextcord.ext.commands.CheckAnyFailure(checks, errors)

Exception raised when all predicates in check_any() fail.

This inherits from CheckFailure.

New in version 1.3.

errors

A list of errors that were caught during execution.

Type:

List[CheckFailure]

checks

A list of check predicates that failed.

Type:

List[Callable[[Context], bool]]

exception nextcord.ext.commands.CommandNotFound(command_name)

Exception raised when a command is attempted to be invoked but no command under that name is found.

This is not raised for invalid subcommands, rather just the initial main command that is attempted to be invoked.

This inherits from CommandError.

Changed in version 2.1: Added command_name as a parameter.

command_name

The command that was not found.

Type:

str

exception nextcord.ext.commands.DisabledCommand(message=None, *args)

Exception raised when the command being invoked is disabled.

This inherits from CommandError

exception nextcord.ext.commands.CommandInvokeError(e)

Exception raised when the command being invoked raised an exception.

This inherits from CommandError

original

The original exception that was raised. You can also get this via the __cause__ attribute.

Type:

Exception

exception nextcord.ext.commands.TooManyArguments(message=None, *args)

Exception raised when the command was passed too many arguments and its Command.ignore_extra attribute was not set to True.

This inherits from UserInputError

exception nextcord.ext.commands.UserInputError(message=None, *args)

The base exception type for errors that involve errors regarding user input.

This inherits from CommandError.

exception nextcord.ext.commands.CommandOnCooldown(cooldown, retry_after, type)

Exception raised when the command being invoked is on cooldown.

This inherits from CommandError

cooldown

A class with attributes rate and per similar to the cooldown() decorator.

Type:

Cooldown

type

The type associated with the cooldown.

Type:

BucketType

retry_after

The amount of seconds to wait before you can retry again.

Type:

float

exception nextcord.ext.commands.MaxConcurrencyReached(number, per)

Exception raised when the command being invoked has reached its maximum concurrency.

This inherits from CommandError.

number

The maximum number of concurrent invokers allowed.

Type:

int

per

The bucket type passed to the max_concurrency() decorator.

Type:

BucketType

exception nextcord.ext.commands.NotOwner(message=None, *args)

Exception raised when the message author is not the owner of the bot.

This inherits from CheckFailure

exception nextcord.ext.commands.MessageNotFound(argument)

Exception raised when the message provided was not found in the channel.

This inherits from BadArgument

New in version 1.5.

argument

The message supplied by the caller that was not found

Type:

str

exception nextcord.ext.commands.MemberNotFound(argument)

Exception raised when the member provided was not found in the bot’s cache.

This inherits from BadArgument

New in version 1.5.

argument

The member supplied by the caller that was not found

Type:

str

exception nextcord.ext.commands.GuildNotFound(argument)

Exception raised when the guild provided was not found in the bot’s cache.

This inherits from BadArgument

New in version 1.7.

argument

The guild supplied by the called that was not found

Type:

str

exception nextcord.ext.commands.UserNotFound(argument)

Exception raised when the user provided was not found in the bot’s cache.

This inherits from BadArgument

New in version 1.5.

argument

The user supplied by the caller that was not found

Type:

str

exception nextcord.ext.commands.ChannelNotFound(argument)

Exception raised when the bot can not find the channel.

This inherits from BadArgument

New in version 1.5.

argument

The channel supplied by the caller that was not found

Type:

str

exception nextcord.ext.commands.ScheduledEventNotFound(argument)

Exception raised when the bot can not find the scheduled event.

This inherits from BadArgument

New in version 2.0.

argument

The scheduled event supplied by the caller that was not found

Type:

str

exception nextcord.ext.commands.ChannelNotReadable(argument)

Exception raised when the bot does not have permission to read messages in the channel.

This inherits from BadArgument

New in version 1.5.

argument

The channel supplied by the caller that was not readable

Type:

Union[abc.GuildChannel, Thread]

exception nextcord.ext.commands.ThreadNotFound(argument)

Exception raised when the bot can not find the thread.

This inherits from BadArgument

New in version 2.0.

argument

The thread supplied by the caller that was not found

Type:

str

exception nextcord.ext.commands.BadColourArgument(argument)

Exception raised when the colour is not valid.

This inherits from BadArgument

New in version 1.5.

argument

The colour supplied by the caller that was not valid

Type:

str

exception nextcord.ext.commands.RoleNotFound(argument)

Exception raised when the bot can not find the role.

This inherits from BadArgument

New in version 1.5.

argument

The role supplied by the caller that was not found

Type:

str

exception nextcord.ext.commands.BadInviteArgument(argument)

Exception raised when the invite is invalid or expired.

This inherits from BadArgument

New in version 1.5.

exception nextcord.ext.commands.EmojiNotFound(argument)

Exception raised when the bot can not find the emoji.

This inherits from BadArgument

New in version 1.5.

argument

The emoji supplied by the caller that was not found

Type:

str

exception nextcord.ext.commands.PartialEmojiConversionFailure(argument)

Exception raised when the emoji provided does not match the correct format.

This inherits from BadArgument

New in version 1.5.

argument

The emoji supplied by the caller that did not match the regex

Type:

str

exception nextcord.ext.commands.GuildStickerNotFound(argument)

Exception raised when the bot can not find the sticker.

This inherits from BadArgument

New in version 2.0.

argument

The sticker supplied by the caller that was not found

Type:

str

exception nextcord.ext.commands.BadBoolArgument(argument)

Exception raised when a boolean argument was not convertable.

This inherits from BadArgument

New in version 1.5.

argument

The boolean argument supplied by the caller that is not in the predefined list

Type:

str

exception nextcord.ext.commands.MissingPermissions(missing_permissions, *args)

Exception raised when the command invoker lacks permissions to run a command.

This inherits from CheckFailure

missing_permissions

The required permissions that are missing.

Type:

List[str]

exception nextcord.ext.commands.BotMissingPermissions(missing_permissions, *args)

Exception raised when the bot’s member lacks permissions to run a command.

This inherits from CheckFailure

missing_permissions

The required permissions that are missing.

Type:

List[str]

exception nextcord.ext.commands.MissingRole(missing_role)

Exception raised when the command invoker lacks a role to run a command.

This inherits from CheckFailure

New in version 1.1.

missing_role

The required role that is missing. This is the parameter passed to has_role().

Type:

Union[str, int]

exception nextcord.ext.commands.BotMissingRole(missing_role)

Exception raised when the bot’s member lacks a role to run a command.

This inherits from CheckFailure

New in version 1.1.

missing_role

The required role that is missing. This is the parameter passed to has_role().

Type:

Union[str, int]

exception nextcord.ext.commands.MissingAnyRole(missing_roles)

Exception raised when the command invoker lacks any of the roles specified to run a command.

This inherits from CheckFailure

New in version 1.1.

missing_roles

The roles that the invoker is missing. These are the parameters passed to has_any_role().

Type:

List[Union[str, int]]

exception nextcord.ext.commands.BotMissingAnyRole(missing_roles)

Exception raised when the bot’s member lacks any of the roles specified to run a command.

This inherits from CheckFailure

New in version 1.1.

missing_roles

The roles that the bot’s member is missing. These are the parameters passed to has_any_role().

Type:

List[Union[str, int]]

exception nextcord.ext.commands.NSFWChannelRequired(channel)

Exception raised when a channel does not have the required NSFW setting.

This inherits from CheckFailure.

New in version 1.1.

Parameters:

channel (Union[abc.GuildChannel, Thread]) – The channel that does not have NSFW enabled.

exception nextcord.ext.commands.FlagError(message=None, *args)

The base exception type for all flag parsing related errors.

This inherits from BadArgument.

New in version 2.0.

exception nextcord.ext.commands.BadFlagArgument(flag)

An exception raised when a flag failed to convert a value.

This inherits from FlagError

New in version 2.0.

flag

The flag that failed to convert.

Type:

Flag

exception nextcord.ext.commands.MissingFlagArgument(flag)

An exception raised when a flag did not get a value.

This inherits from FlagError

New in version 2.0.

flag

The flag that did not get a value.

Type:

Flag

exception nextcord.ext.commands.TooManyFlags(flag, values)

An exception raised when a flag has received too many values.

This inherits from FlagError.

New in version 2.0.

flag

The flag that received too many values.

Type:

Flag

values

The values that were passed.

Type:

List[str]

exception nextcord.ext.commands.MissingRequiredFlag(flag)

An exception raised when a required flag was not given.

This inherits from FlagError

New in version 2.0.

flag

The required flag that was not found.

Type:

Flag

exception nextcord.ext.commands.ExtensionError(message=None, *args, name)

Base exception for extension related errors.

This inherits from DiscordException.

name

The extension that had an error.

Type:

str

exception nextcord.ext.commands.ExtensionAlreadyLoaded(name)

An exception raised when an extension has already been loaded.

This inherits from ExtensionError

exception nextcord.ext.commands.ExtensionNotLoaded(name)

An exception raised when an extension was not loaded.

This inherits from ExtensionError

exception nextcord.ext.commands.NoEntryPointError(name)

An exception raised when an extension does not have a setup entry point function.

This inherits from ExtensionError

exception nextcord.ext.commands.InvalidSetupArguments(name)
An exception raised when an extension contains a setup function which does

except kwargs but kwargs were passed.

This inherits from ExtensionError

exception nextcord.ext.commands.ExtensionFailed(name, original)

An exception raised when an extension failed to load during execution of the module or setup entry point.

This inherits from ExtensionError

name

The extension that had the error.

Type:

str

original

The original exception that was raised. You can also get this via the __cause__ attribute.

Type:

Exception

exception nextcord.ext.commands.ExtensionNotFound(name)

An exception raised when an extension is not found.

This inherits from ExtensionError

Changed in version 1.3: Made the original attribute always None.

name

The extension that had the error.

Type:

str

exception nextcord.ext.commands.CommandRegistrationError(name, *, alias_conflict=False)

An exception raised when the command can’t be added because the name is already taken by a different command.

This inherits from nextcord.ClientException

New in version 1.4.

name

The command name that had the error.

Type:

str

alias_conflict

Whether the name that conflicts is an alias of the command we try to add.

Type:

bool

Exception Hierarchy