from telethon import TelegramClient import configParse param = configParse.get_TgToFileSystemParameter() # Remember to use your own values from my.telegram.org! api_id = param.ApiParameter.api_id api_hash = param.ApiParameter.api_hash client = TelegramClient('anon', api_id, api_hash, proxy={ 'proxy_type': 'socks5', 'addr': '172.25.32.1', 'port': 7890, }) # client = TelegramClient('anon', api_id, api_hash, proxy=("socks5", '127.0.0.1', 7890)) # proxy=("socks5", '127.0.0.1', 4444) async def main(): # Getting information about yourself me = await client.get_me() # "me" is a user object. You can pretty-print # any Telegram object with the "stringify" method: print(me.stringify()) # When you print something, you see a representation of it. # You can access all attributes of Telegram objects with # the dot operator. For example, to get the username: username = me.username print(username) print(me.phone) # You can print all the dialogs/conversations that you are part of: async for dialog in client.iter_dialogs(): print(dialog.name, 'has ID', dialog.id) # You can send messages to yourself... # await client.send_message('me', 'Hello, myself!') # ...to some chat ID # await client.send_message(-100123456, 'Hello, group!') # ...to your contacts # await client.send_message('+34600123123', 'Hello, friend!') # ...or even to any username # await client.send_message('username', 'Testing Telethon!') # You can, of course, use markdown in your messages: # message = await client.send_message( # 'me', # 'This message has **bold**, `code`, __italics__ and ' # 'a [nice website](https://example.com)!', # link_preview=False # ) # Sending a message returns the sent message object, which you can use # print(message.raw_text) # You can reply to messages directly if you have a message object # await message.reply('Cool!') # Or send files, songs, documents, albums... # await client.send_file('me', './test.py') # You can print the message history of any chat: message = await client.get_messages('me', ids=206963) async for message in client.iter_messages('me'): print(message.id, message.text) # You can download media from messages, too! # The method will return the path where the file was saved. # if message.photo: # path = await message.download_media() # print('File saved to', path) # printed after download is done with client: client.loop.run_until_complete(main())