Example json for show inline_keyboard in telegram bot
https://core.telegram.org/bots#inline-keyboards-and-on-the-fly-updating
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{
"chat_id": "123456",
"text": "Hi",
"reply_markup": {
"inline_keyboard": [[
{
"text": "A",
"callback_data": "A1"
},
{
"text": "B",
"callback_data": "C1"
}]
]
}
}
I just had a hard time trying to get it to work on my API and I've found the problem. You need to JSON.stringify() the contents of reply_markup that converts the keyboard object and contents into a string first.
Here's an example.
bot.onCommand = function (chat, from, message_id, text, command, commandData) {
if (command === "test") {
var keyboard = {
"inline_keyboard": [
[
{"text": "Yes", "url": "http://www.google.com/"},
{"text": "No", "url": "http://www.google.com/"}
]
]
};
var data = {
"reply_to_message_id": message_id,
"reply_markup": JSON.stringify(keyboard)
};
bot.sendText(chat.id, "test", data, function (isSuccess) {
console.log(isSuccess);
});
return;
}
}
I wrote this to hopefully make it less confusing.
The output will be:
(test )
[Yes] [No]
The circler brackets is the message and the square brackets is the buttons. Both in this example opens a link to Google.
Well, I think I understood what you mean, jeissonp. It seems that you are using Node.js to write Telegram bots, and that's how you provide a user with an inline keyboard:
Create a keyboard:
const opts = {
"reply_markup": {
"inline_keyboard": [[
{
"text": "A",
"callback_data": "A1"
},
{
"text": "B",
"callback_data": "C1"
}]
]
}
}
And then send a message with the opts:
bot.sendMessage(chatID, "Message text", opts);
Hope it helps!