Two API fields carry restricted emoji-value sets that the scraper's
curly-quote regex strips during IR extraction (multi-byte boundary
issue): ReactionTypeEmoji.Emoji and sendDice.Emoji. They previously
typed as plain string with no compile-time guarantee on values.
Add hand-curated typed-string enums in api/enums.go (the manual file,
not enums.gen.go):
- DiceEmoji: 6 constants (Dice, Dart, Basketball, Football, Bowling,
SlotMachine) covering Telegram's full set for sendDice.
- ReactionEmoji: 73 constants covering the canonical reaction set
from https://core.telegram.org/bots/api#reactiontypeemoji. Names
follow Unicode CLDR short names where one exists, otherwise stable
common-English labels (e.g. ThumbsUp, Heart, Clown, ManTechnologist).
Wire the field-type override via cmd/genapi/emitter.go:
- fieldTypeOverrides map keyed "<TypeOrParamsName>.<FieldName>".
- goField/multipartFieldEntry consult the override after the enum-plan
lookup; falls through to the default goType when nothing matches.
- methods.tmpl gains goFieldP/multipartFieldEntryP helpers that pass
the params type name as override-parent (the params struct doesn't
share a Go type with the field, so the existing parent="" enum-key
convention is preserved).
Regenerated api/types.gen.go and api/methods.gen.go now type the two
fields as ReactionEmoji and DiceEmoji respectively. No other Emoji
field is affected (override is scoped per parent type). regen-from-
fixture is byte-deterministic across runs.
Add api/emoji_enums_test.go covering const wire values, reflection
checks on field types, and a marshal/unmarshal round-trip for
ReactionTypeEmoji.
GetChatAdministrators returns []ChatMember, where ChatMember is a
sealed-interface union. The codegen template emitted the generic
client.Call[..., []ChatMember] for it — encoding/json cannot unmarshal
a slice of an interface (no discriminator-aware path), so every real
response from Telegram failed at the parse step:
telegram: parse: json: cannot unmarshal api.ChatMember into
Go struct field Result[[]ChatMember].Result of type api.ChatMember
Fix is in cmd/genapi/methods.tmpl: add a third branch alongside the
existing single-union branch. When a method returns []<union>,
emit CallRaw + json.Unmarshal into []json.RawMessage + per-element
Unmarshal<Union>(e). Mirrors what GetChatMember (single-element)
already does, applied uniformly so any future slice-of-union method
Telegram introduces inherits the right shape.
Survey of v1.1.1 across all 23 sealed-interface unions confirms
GetChatAdministrators was the only broken site; the fix regenerates
just that one method body. New regression tests in
api/getchatadministrators_test.go cover the typical
admin+owner response and the empty-array case.
The Telegram docs describe many string fields and parameters with
phrases like "can be ..., or ...", "must be one of ...", or "always X",
yet the generated Go API surface used raw `string` for every one of
them. Callers had to write magic strings or `string(api.ChatTypePrivate)`
to satisfy the field type. This change makes those fields typed Go
string enums emitted from the IR, so the IDE autocompletes valid values
and breaking-value drift surfaces at compile time.
Pipeline changes:
- internal/spec/ir.go: Field gains EnumValues []string. Empty for non-
enum fields; otherwise the wire-level values in doc order, deduped.
- cmd/scrape/enums.go: extractEnumValues recognises the curly-quoted
patterns Telegram uses ("can be either", "currently can be", "one
of", "must be", "always X") and rejects free-text quoted refs (e.g.
"Can be available only for X") via a tight gap check between the
trigger phrase and the first quoted value. parse_mode parameters
get the canonical Markdown / MarkdownV2 / HTML triple injected
because Telegram links to a separate formatting-options section
instead of listing values inline.
- cmd/genapi/enums.go: planEnums groups fields by sorted value-tuple,
picks a canonical Go enum name (most-common candidate, parent-
prefixed beats plain, shortest beats longer, alphabetical for
determinism), resolves cross-group name collisions by parent prefix.
- cmd/genapi/emitter.go + templates: goField rewrites the field type
to the planned enum name; multipartFieldEntry casts typed enum
values back to string when composing the wire map; enums.tmpl now
iterates the planned enums instead of hardcoding four hand-curated
ones; sentinelForField produces typed-constant test fixtures.
- api/enums.gen.go: regenerated from the live IR. 66 enum types, 155
constants. ParseMode, ChatType, MessageEntityType, ChatMember /
MessageOrigin / PaidMedia / Background / StoryAreaType / Reaction /
TransactionPartner / PassportElement variant Status & Type fields
are now typed.
- api/enums.go: hand-coded UpdateType (used by transport.LongPoller).
The Telegram docs do not enumerate Update payload kinds inline, so
the codegen pipeline cannot synthesise this enum.
- api/types.gen.go, api/methods.gen.go, api/methods_gen_test.go: 137
field declarations rewritten string -> typed enum.
- dispatch/, examples/: dropped every string(api.<Const>) cast. The
HasEntity filter now takes api.MessageEntityType; ChatType filter
compares typed values directly. ChatMember discriminator filter
casts variant.Status (typed per variant) to string for comparison.
- internal/spec/api.json, testdata/golden/*: regenerated and
refreshed. make regen-from-fixture is byte-deterministic across
runs.
Renames (no compat shims; v1 pre-public):
- EntityX -> MessageEntityTypeX (e.g. EntityBotCommand -> MessageEntityTypeBotCommand)
- EntityStrike -> MessageEntityTypeStrikethrough (full wire name)
A fully-generated, strongly-typed Go client for the Telegram Bot API.
* 176 methods + 301 types generated from Bot API v10.0
* 1408 auto-generated tests (8 scenarios per method)
* Typed unions throughout — no 'any' in the public surface
* Pluggable HTTP transport and JSON codec (default goccy/go-json)
* Built-in retry middleware honouring Telegram's retry_after
* Generic dispatcher with filters and conversation handlers
* Self-verifying codegen pipeline (regen → audit → emit → run tests)
* 14 example bots covering common patterns