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Attentive

Attentive is a library for matching messages to natural-language listeners.


Usage

Its basic usage is like this:

include Attentive

listen_for "hi", context: { in: :any } do
  puts "nice to meet you!"
end

hear! "hi!" # => "nice to meet you!"

In the snippet above,

  1. We defined a listener that is active in any context.
  2. We received a message.
  3. Attentive matched the message to our listener and invoked the block.

Optional Characters

You'll notice that we listened for "hi" but heard "hi!". Attentive treats punctuation and emojis as optional; but we can make them required by putting them in the listener:

listen_for "hi!", context: { in: :any } do
  puts "nice to meet you!"
end

hear! "hi" # => nothing happened, the listener is expecting the exclamation mark

It's best to leave all but the most necessary punctuation out of listeners.


Contractions and Abbreviations

Attentive understands contractions and abbreviations and can match those:

listen_for "hi", context: { in: :any } do
  puts "nice to meet you!"
end

hear! "hello!" # => "nice to meet you!"

listen_for "what is for lunch", context: { in: :any } do
  puts "HAMBURGERS!"
end

hear! "what's for lunch?" # => "HAMBURGERS!"

Although you can use contractions and abbreviations in listeners, it's a good habit not to. Attentive will not let you define listeners that use ambiguous contractions like "where's" ("where's" might be a contraction for "where is", "where does", or "where has", or "where was").


Listeners

Listeners are defined with three things:

  1. One or more phrases
  2. A set of contexts where they're active
  3. A block to be invoked when the listener is matched

Here's an example of a listener that matches more than one phrase:

listen_for "what is for lunch",
           "what is for lunch {{date:core.date.relative.future}}",
           "what is for lunch on {{date:core.date}}",
           "show me the menu for {{date:core.date.relative.future}}",
           "show me the menu for {{date:core.date}}" do
  # ...
end

(In the example above, the phrases {{date:core.date.relative.future}} and {{date:core.date}} are entities: which we'll cover in a minute.)


Contexts

A listener can require that messages be heard in a certain context in order to be matched or it can ignore messages if they are heard in certain contexts.

The following is a listener that will only match messages heard in the "#general" channel and only then if the conversation is not "serious".

listen_for "ouch", context: { in: %i{general}, not_in: %i{serious} } do
  puts "On a scale of 1 to 10, how would you rate your pain?"
end

hear! "ouch" # => message has no context, listener isn't triggered
hear! "ouch", contexts: %i{general} # => "On a scale of 1 to 10..."
hear! "ouch", contexts: %i{general serious} # => listener ignores "serious" messages

If you don't specify context requirements for listeners, Attentive requires conversation and prohibits quotation by default:

# These two are the same:
listen_for "ouch"
listen_for "ouch", context: { in: %i{conversation}, not_in: %i{quotation} }

Entities

Entities allow Attentive to match concepts rather than specific words.

There are built-in entities like core.date, core.number, and core.email for recognizing dates, numbers, and email addresses (see Core Entities for a complete list); but you can also define entities for domain-specific concepts. For example:

Attentive::Entity.define "deweys.menu.beers",
  "Bell's Oberon",
  "Rogue Dead Guy Ale",
  "Schalfly Dry Hopped IPA",
  "4 Hands Contact High",
  "Scrimshaw Pilsner"

Now we can take drink orders:

listen_for "I will have a pint of the {{deweys.menu.beers}}" do
  puts "Good choice"
end

It is a good idea to namespace entities (i.e. deweys.menu.beers). Attentive's convention is to treat namespaces as a taxonomy for concepts.


Regular Expressions

As useful as enumerations are, entities can also be defined with regular expressions and with a block that converts the matched part of the message to a more useful value:

# Usernames can be up to 21 characters long.
# They can contain lowercase letters a to z
# (without accents), and numbers 0 to 9.

Attentive::Entity.define "slack.user", %q{(?<username>[a-z0-9]{1,21})} do |match|
  Slack::User.find match["username"]
end

Whenever possible, though, prefer composing entities to using regular expressions. For example:

Attentive::Entity.define "core.date.relative.future",
  "next {{core.date.wday}}"

is better than:

Attentive::Entity.define "core.date.relative.future",
  "next (?<weekday>(:sun|mon|tues|wednes|thurs|fri|satur)day)"

Installation

Add this line to your application's Gemfile:

gem 'attentive'

And then execute:

$ bundle

Or install it yourself as:

$ gem install attentive

Development

After checking out the repo, run bin/setup to install dependencies. Then, run rake test to run the tests. You can also run bin/console for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment.

To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install. To release a new version, update the version number in version.rb, and then run bundle exec rake release, which will create a git tag for the version, push git commits and tags, and push the .gem file to rubygems.org.


Contributing

Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/houston/attentive.


License

The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.

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A library for matching messages to natural-language listeners

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