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Economy (TS)

Welcome to your fresh Robo.js project!

Build, deploy, and maintain your Discord activities with ease. With Robo.js as your guide, you'll experience a seamless, file-based setup, an integrated database, TypeScript support, and a multitude of plugin-powered skills to unlock along the way.

Ready to embark on this adventure?

Running ‍️​

To run your Robo, simply use the following command:

Terminal
npx robo dev

No need to re-run when you make changes. Your Robo will automatically restart! πŸ”„

Template Overview​

The Robo.js Economy Bot is a beginner-friendly Discord bot built on the Discord.js framework. This bot provides a simple yet effective starting point for those looking to implement economy-related features in their Discord server.

Slash Commands​

The bot supports several Slash commands to manage the in-server economy. Here are the available commands:

CommandDescription
/pingPings the bot to check if it's online.
/balanceCheck your or others account balance
/withdrawWithdraw credits from your bank to your wallet
/depositDeposit credits from your wallet into your bank.
/dailyClaim your daily currency reward.
/shareShare credits to another user.
/roll_diceRoll a dice to test your luck and win or lose credits.

Features ️​

  • Guild-Only Middleware: Commands can only be used within the server where the bot is deployed.
  • Flashcore: All data is stored safely with Flashcore, you can even add Custom Database using Keyv!
  • Automatic Account Creation: User accounts are created automatically when they first interact with the bot.
  • Preventing Forced Participation: Users cannot force other users to participate in the economy commands without even playing game once.

Feel free to customize, expand, or modify this bot to suit your server's needs. Have fun building your own economy system with Robo.js Economy Bot!

Deployment​

Ready to deploy and keep your Robo online at all times? Check out the Deployment Documentation.

Developing ️​

Create new slash commands by making a new file under the /src/commands directory with an exported default function. The file's name becomes the command's name. You can either use the interaction parameter or return the result to let Sage handle it for you. For more info on commands, see the Discord.js Documentation.

Commands will be automatically registered with Discord when needed, but you can force it by running npx robo build -f.

To listen to new events, create a file named after the event in /src/events. For example, typingStart.js will notify you when someone starts typing. You can stack multiple files for the same event by making a directory named after the event. Files inside it can be named whatever you want. For example:

- src
- events
- typingStart
- your-file.js
- another.js

Debugging​

Got bugs? No biggie! Robo.js has your back with nifty built-in debugging magic. During dev mode, Robo will provide you with error information, stack traces, interactive logs, and even a sneak peek at the exact code that caused the issue!

To get started, set up a personal Discord server for your Robo to hang out in and add your server's ID as a DISCORD_GUILD_ID env variable. Doing this unlocks the fab debugging features, plus the super-handy /dev command that gives you quick access to logs, system info, and more.

For a more comprehensive guide, take a look at the Debugging Documentation. πŸ•΅οΈβ€β™€οΈπŸ”

Configuration ️​

Robo.js automatically handles creating your Discord.js Client instance, but you can still configure what gets passed to it using the config/robo.mjs file. Use it to add more intents or change the behavior of other Robo.js features such as Sage, default commands, timeouts, and more.

The .env file contains your DISCORD_TOKEN and DISCORD_CLIENT_ID. Keep these secret. You can get these values from the Discord Developer Portal.

Plugins​

Robo.js has a powerful plugin system. Install plugins as NPM packages like this:

Terminal
npm install @roboplay/plugin-gpt

Replace @roboplay/plugin-gpt with the plugin's package name. Next, add the plugin to your Robo's configuration file, typically located at config/robo.mjs.

You can also turn your existing robo into a plugin using npx robo build plugin and uploading it to NPM via npm publish. Just be careful and make sure you're not including sensitive data such as your .env file.

Deployment​

Run the npx robo deploy command to automatically deploy to RoboPlay for free once you're ready to keep your robo online 24/7. You can also self-host your robo anywhere that supports Node. Just make sure to run the npx robo build command followed by npx robo start.

You can also run npx robo invite (beta) to automatically generate a server invite to test it yourself or show it off! You can also use the Discord Developer Portal to generate an invite as usual.

Happy coding! πŸŽ‰

Learn More​

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