mirror of
https://github.com/TeamPGM/pyrogram.git
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538f1e3972
- Pyrogram core is now fully asynchronous - Ditched Python 3.5, welcome 3.6 as minimum version. - Moved all types to pyrogram.types - Turned the Filters class into a module (filters) - Moved all filters to pyrogram.filters - Moved all handlers to pyrogram.handlers - Moved all emoji to pyrogram.emoji - Renamed pyrogram.api to pyrogram.raw - Clock is now synced with server's time - Telegram schema updated to Layer 117 - Greatly improved the TL compiler (proper type-constructor hierarchy) - Added "do not edit" warning in generated files - Crypto parts are executed in a thread pool to avoid blocking the event loop - idle() is now a separate function (it doesn't deal with Client instances) - Async storage, async filters and async progress callback (optional, can be sync too) - Added getpass back, for hidden password inputs
72 lines
1.9 KiB
ReStructuredText
72 lines
1.9 KiB
ReStructuredText
Session Settings
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================
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As you may probably know, Telegram allows users (and bots) having more than one session (authorizations) registered
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in the system at the same time.
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Briefly explaining, sessions are simply new logins in your account. They can be reviewed in the settings of an official
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app (or by invoking :class:`~pyrogram.api.functions.account.GetAuthorizations` with Pyrogram). They
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store some useful information such as the client who's using them and from which country and IP address.
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.. figure:: https://i.imgur.com/YaqtMLO.png
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:width: 600
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:align: center
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**A Pyrogram session running on Linux, Python 3.7.**
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That's how a session looks like on the Android app, showing the three main pieces of information.
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- ``app_version``: **Pyrogram 0.13.0**
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- ``device_model``: **CPython 3.7.2**
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- ``system_version``: **Linux 4.15.0-23-generic**
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.. contents:: Contents
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:backlinks: none
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:depth: 1
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:local:
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-----
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Set Custom Values
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-----------------
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To set custom values, you can either make use of the ``config.ini`` file, this way:
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.. code-block:: ini
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[pyrogram]
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app_version = 1.2.3
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device_model = PC
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system_version = Linux
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Or, pass the arguments directly in the Client's constructor.
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.. code-block:: python
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app = Client(
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"my_account",
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app_version="1.2.3",
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device_model="PC",
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system_version="Linux"
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)
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Set Custom Languages
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--------------------
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To tell Telegram in which language should speak to you (terms of service, bots, service messages, ...) you can
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set ``lang_code`` in `ISO 639-1 <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_ISO_639-1_codes>`_ standard (defaults to "en",
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English).
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With the following code we make Telegram know we want it to speak in Italian (it):
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.. code-block:: ini
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[pyrogram]
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lang_code = it
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.. code-block:: python
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app = Client(
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"my_account",
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lang_code="it",
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) |