A conversation between a bot and a user often involves asking (prompting) the user for information, parsing the user's response, and then acting on that information. Your bot should track the context of a conversation, so that it can manage its behavior and remember answers to previous questions. A bot's state is information it tracks to respond appropriately to incoming messages.
Tip
The dialogs library provides built-in prompts that provide more functionality that users can use. Examples of those prompts can be found in the Implement sequential conversation flow article.
Note
The Bot Framework JavaScript, C#, and Python SDKs will continue to be supported, however, the Java SDK is being retired with final long-term support ending in November 2023.
Existing bots built with the Java SDK will continue to function.
The sample bot asks the user a series of questions, validates some of their answers, and saves their input. The following diagram shows the relationship between the bot, user profile, and conversation flow classes.
A UserProfile class for the user information that the bot will collect.
A ConversationFlow class to control our conversation state while gathering user information.
An inner ConversationFlow.Question enumeration for tracking where you are in the conversation.
A userProfile class for the user information that the bot will collect.
A conversationFlow class to control our conversation state while gathering user information.
An inner conversationFlow.question enumeration for tracking where you are in the conversation.
A UserProfile class for the user information that the bot will collect.
A ConversationFlow class to control our conversation state while gathering user information.
An inner ConversationFlow.Question enumeration for tracking where you are in the conversation.
A UserProfile class for the user information that the bot will collect.
A ConversationFlow class to control our conversation state while gathering user information.
An inner ConversationFlow.Question enumeration for tracking where you are in the conversation.
The user state will track the user's name, age, and chosen date, and conversation state will track what you last asked the user.
Since you don't plan to deploy this bot, you'll configure user and conversation state to use memory storage.
You use the bot's message turn handler plus user and conversation state properties to manage the flow of the conversation and the collection of input. In your bot, you'll record the state property information received during each iteration of the message turn handler.
Create the user and conversation state objects at startup and consume them via dependency injection in the bot constructor.
Startup.cs
// Create the Bot Adapter with error handling enabled.
services.AddSingleton<IBotFrameworkHttpAdapter, AdapterWithErrorHandler>();
// Create the storage we'll be using for User and Conversation state. (Memory is great for testing purposes.)
services.AddSingleton<IStorage, MemoryStorage>();
// Create the User state.
services.AddSingleton<UserState>();
// Create the Conversation state.
services.AddSingleton<ConversationState>();
Create the user and conversation state objects in index.js and consume them in the bot constructor.
index.js
// Catch-all for errors.
adapter.onTurnError = async (context, error) => {
// This check writes out errors to console log .vs. app insights.
// NOTE: In production environment, you should consider logging this to Azure
bots/customPromptBot.js
class CustomPromptBot extends ActivityHandler {
constructor(conversationState, userState) {
super();
// The state management objects for the conversation and user.
this.conversationState = conversationState;
this.userState = userState;
Construct the CustomPromptBot in the getBot method using the ConversationState and UserState instances provided by the Spring container. The constructor of CustomPromptBot will store references to the ConversationState and UserState provided during startup.
Application.java
@Bean
public Bot getBot(
ConversationState conversationState,
UserState userState
) {
return new CustomPromptBot(conversationState, userState);
}
CustomPromptBot.java
private final BotState userState;
private final BotState conversationState;
public CustomPromptBot(ConversationState conversationState, UserState userState) {
this.conversationState = conversationState;
this.userState = userState;
Create the user and conversation state objects in app.py and consume them in the bot constructor.
app.py
CONVERSATION_STATE = ConversationState(MEMORY)
# Create Bot
BOT = CustomPromptBot(CONVERSATION_STATE, USER_STATE)
# Listen for incoming requests on /api/messages.
bots/custom_prompt_bot.py
class CustomPromptBot(ActivityHandler):
def __init__(self, conversation_state: ConversationState, user_state: UserState):
if conversation_state is None:
raise TypeError(
"[CustomPromptBot]: Missing parameter. conversation_state is required but None was given"
)
if user_state is None:
raise TypeError(
"[CustomPromptBot]: Missing parameter. user_state is required but None was given"
)
self.conversation_state = conversation_state
self.user_state = user_state
Before the turn ends, call saveChanges to write any state changes to storage.
/**
* Override the ActivityHandler.run() method to save state changes after the bot logic completes.
*/
async run(context) {
await super.run(context);
// Save any state changes. The load happened during the execution of the Dialog.
await this.conversationState.saveChanges(context, false);
await this.userState.saveChanges(context, false);
}
Create property accessors for the user profile and conversation flow properties and then call get to retrieve the property value from state.
In the constructor, you create the state property accessors and set up the state management objects (created above) for our conversation.
bots/custom_prompt_bot.py
async def on_message_activity(self, turn_context: TurnContext):
# Get the state properties from the turn context.
profile = await self.profile_accessor.get(turn_context, UserProfile)
flow = await self.flow_accessor.get(turn_context, ConversationFlow)
Before the turn ends, call SaveChangesAsync to write any state changes to storage.
# Save changes to UserState and ConversationState
await self.conversation_state.save_changes(turn_context)
await self.user_state.save_changes(turn_context)
Message turn handler
When handling message activities, the message handler uses a helper method to manage the conversation and prompt the user. The helper method is described in the following section.
async def on_message_activity(self, turn_context: TurnContext):
# Get the state properties from the turn context.
profile = await self.profile_accessor.get(turn_context, UserProfile)
flow = await self.flow_accessor.get(turn_context, ConversationFlow)
await self._fill_out_user_profile(flow, profile, turn_context)
# Save changes to UserState and ConversationState
await self.conversation_state.save_changes(turn_context)
await self.user_state.save_changes(turn_context)
Filling out the user profile
The bot prompts the user for information, based on which question, if any, that the bot asked on the previous turn. Input is parsed using a validation method.
Each validation method follows a similar design:
The return value indicates whether the input is a valid answer for this question.
If validation passes, it produces a parsed and normalized value to save.
If validation fails, it produces a message with which the bot can ask for the information again.
The validation methods are described in the following section.
{
var input = turnContext.Activity.Text?.Trim();
string message;
switch (flow.LastQuestionAsked)
{
case ConversationFlow.Question.None:
await turnContext.SendActivityAsync("Let's get started. What is your name?", null, null, cancellationToken);
flow.LastQuestionAsked = ConversationFlow.Question.Name;
break;
case ConversationFlow.Question.Name:
if (ValidateName(input, out var name, out message))
{
profile.Name = name;
await turnContext.SendActivityAsync($"Hi {profile.Name}.", null, null, cancellationToken);
await turnContext.SendActivityAsync("How old are you?", null, null, cancellationToken);
flow.LastQuestionAsked = ConversationFlow.Question.Age;
break;
}
else
{
await turnContext.SendActivityAsync(message ?? "I'm sorry, I didn't understand that.", null, null, cancellationToken);
break;
}
case ConversationFlow.Question.Age:
if (ValidateAge(input, out var age, out message))
{
profile.Age = age;
await turnContext.SendActivityAsync($"I have your age as {profile.Age}.", null, null, cancellationToken);
await turnContext.SendActivityAsync("When is your flight?", null, null, cancellationToken);
flow.LastQuestionAsked = ConversationFlow.Question.Date;
break;
}
else
{
await turnContext.SendActivityAsync(message ?? "I'm sorry, I didn't understand that.", null, null, cancellationToken);
break;
}
case ConversationFlow.Question.Date:
if (ValidateDate(input, out var date, out message))
{
profile.Date = date;
await turnContext.SendActivityAsync($"Your cab ride to the airport is scheduled for {profile.Date}.");
await turnContext.SendActivityAsync($"Thanks for completing the booking {profile.Name}.");
await turnContext.SendActivityAsync($"Type anything to run the bot again.");
flow.LastQuestionAsked = ConversationFlow.Question.None;
profile = new UserProfile();
break;
}
else
{
await turnContext.SendActivityAsync(message ?? "I'm sorry, I didn't understand that.", null, null, cancellationToken);
break;
}
}
}
bots/customPromptBot.js
// Manages the conversation flow for filling out the user's profile.
static async fillOutUserProfile(flow, profile, turnContext) {
const input = turnContext.activity.text;
let result;
switch (flow.lastQuestionAsked) {
// If we're just starting off, we haven't asked the user for any information yet.
// Ask the user for their name and update the conversation flag.
case question.none:
await turnContext.sendActivity("Let's get started. What is your name?");
flow.lastQuestionAsked = question.name;
break;
// If we last asked for their name, record their response, confirm that we got it.
// Ask them for their age and update the conversation flag.
case question.name:
result = this.validateName(input);
if (result.success) {
profile.name = result.name;
await turnContext.sendActivity(`I have your name as ${ profile.name }.`);
await turnContext.sendActivity('How old are you?');
flow.lastQuestionAsked = question.age;
break;
} else {
// If we couldn't interpret their input, ask them for it again.
// Don't update the conversation flag, so that we repeat this step.
await turnContext.sendActivity(result.message || "I'm sorry, I didn't understand that.");
break;
}
// If we last asked for their age, record their response, confirm that we got it.
// Ask them for their date preference and update the conversation flag.
case question.age:
result = this.validateAge(input);
if (result.success) {
profile.age = result.age;
await turnContext.sendActivity(`I have your age as ${ profile.age }.`);
await turnContext.sendActivity('When is your flight?');
flow.lastQuestionAsked = question.date;
break;
} else {
// If we couldn't interpret their input, ask them for it again.
// Don't update the conversation flag, so that we repeat this step.
await turnContext.sendActivity(result.message || "I'm sorry, I didn't understand that.");
break;
}
// If we last asked for a date, record their response, confirm that we got it,
// let them know the process is complete, and update the conversation flag.
case question.date:
result = this.validateDate(input);
if (result.success) {
profile.date = result.date;
await turnContext.sendActivity(`Your cab ride to the airport is scheduled for ${ profile.date }.`);
await turnContext.sendActivity(`Thanks for completing the booking ${ profile.name }.`);
await turnContext.sendActivity('Type anything to run the bot again.');
flow.lastQuestionAsked = question.none;
profile = {};
break;
} else {
// If we couldn't interpret their input, ask them for it again.
// Don't update the conversation flag, so that we repeat this step.
await turnContext.sendActivity(result.message || "I'm sorry, I didn't understand that.");
break;
}
}
}
CustomPromptBot.java
private static CompletableFuture<Void> fillOutUserProfile(ConversationFlow flow,
UserProfile profile,
TurnContext turnContext) {
String input = "";
if (StringUtils.isNotBlank(turnContext.getActivity().getText())) {
input = turnContext.getActivity().getText().trim();
}
switch (flow.getLastQuestionAsked()) {
case None:
return turnContext.sendActivity("Let's get started. What is your name?", null, null)
.thenRun(() -> {flow.setLastQuestionAsked(ConversationFlow.Question.Name);});
case Name:
Triple<Boolean, String, String> nameValidationResult = validateName(input);
if (nameValidationResult.getLeft()) {
profile.setName(nameValidationResult.getMiddle());
return turnContext.sendActivity(String.format("Hi %s.", profile.getName()), null, null)
.thenCompose(result -> turnContext.sendActivity("How old are you?", null, null))
.thenRun(() -> { flow.setLastQuestionAsked(ConversationFlow.Question.Age); });
} else {
if (StringUtils.isNotBlank(nameValidationResult.getRight())) {
return turnContext.sendActivity(nameValidationResult.getRight(), null, null)
.thenApply(result -> null);
} else {
return turnContext.sendActivity("I'm sorry, I didn't understand that.", null, null)
.thenApply(result -> null);
}
}
case Age:
Triple<Boolean, Integer, String> ageValidationResult = ValidateAge(input);
if (ageValidationResult.getLeft()) {
profile.setAge(ageValidationResult.getMiddle());
return turnContext.sendActivity(String.format("I have your age as %d.", profile.getAge()), null, null)
.thenCompose(result -> turnContext.sendActivity("When is your flight?", null, null))
.thenRun(() -> { flow.setLastQuestionAsked(ConversationFlow.Question.Date); });
} else {
if (StringUtils.isNotBlank(ageValidationResult.getRight())) {
return turnContext.sendActivity(ageValidationResult.getRight(), null, null)
.thenApply(result -> null);
} else {
return turnContext.sendActivity("I'm sorry, I didn't understand that.", null, null)
.thenApply(result -> null);
}
}
case Date:
Triple<Boolean, String, String> dateValidationResult = ValidateDate(input);
AtomicReference<UserProfile> profileReference = new AtomicReference<UserProfile>(profile);
if (dateValidationResult.getLeft()) {
profile.setDate(dateValidationResult.getMiddle());
return turnContext.sendActivity(
String.format("Your cab ride to the airport is scheduled for %s.",
profileReference.get().getDate()))
.thenCompose(result -> turnContext.sendActivity(
String.format("Thanks for completing the booking %s.", profileReference.get().getDate())))
.thenCompose(result -> turnContext.sendActivity("Type anything to run the bot again."))
.thenRun(() -> {
flow.setLastQuestionAsked(ConversationFlow.Question.None);
profileReference.set(new UserProfile());
});
} else {
if (StringUtils.isNotBlank(dateValidationResult.getRight())) {
return turnContext.sendActivity(dateValidationResult.getRight(), null, null)
.thenApply(result -> null);
} else {
return turnContext.sendActivity("I'm sorry, I didn't understand that.", null, null)
.thenApply(result -> null);
}
}
default:
return CompletableFuture.completedFuture(null);
}
bots/custom_prompt_bot.py
async def _fill_out_user_profile(
self, flow: ConversationFlow, profile: UserProfile, turn_context: TurnContext
):
user_input = turn_context.activity.text.strip()
# ask for name
if flow.last_question_asked == Question.NONE:
await turn_context.send_activity(
MessageFactory.text("Let's get started. What is your name?")
)
flow.last_question_asked = Question.NAME
# validate name then ask for age
elif flow.last_question_asked == Question.NAME:
validate_result = self._validate_name(user_input)
if not validate_result.is_valid:
await turn_context.send_activity(
MessageFactory.text(validate_result.message)
)
else:
profile.name = validate_result.value
await turn_context.send_activity(
MessageFactory.text(f"Hi {profile.name}")
)
await turn_context.send_activity(
MessageFactory.text("How old are you?")
)
flow.last_question_asked = Question.AGE
# validate age then ask for date
elif flow.last_question_asked == Question.AGE:
validate_result = self._validate_age(user_input)
if not validate_result.is_valid:
await turn_context.send_activity(
MessageFactory.text(validate_result.message)
)
else:
profile.age = validate_result.value
await turn_context.send_activity(
MessageFactory.text(f"I have your age as {profile.age}.")
)
await turn_context.send_activity(
MessageFactory.text("When is your flight?")
)
flow.last_question_asked = Question.DATE
# validate date and wrap it up
elif flow.last_question_asked == Question.DATE:
validate_result = self._validate_date(user_input)
if not validate_result.is_valid:
await turn_context.send_activity(
MessageFactory.text(validate_result.message)
)
else:
profile.date = validate_result.value
await turn_context.send_activity(
MessageFactory.text(
f"Your cab ride to the airport is scheduled for {profile.date}."
)
)
await turn_context.send_activity(
MessageFactory.text(
f"Thanks for completing the booking {profile.name}."
)
)
await turn_context.send_activity(
MessageFactory.text("Type anything to run the bot again.")
)
flow.last_question_asked = Question.NONE
Parse and validate input
The bot uses the following criteria to validate input.
The name must be a non-empty string. It's normalized by trimming white-space.
The age must be between 18 and 120. It's normalized by returning an integer.
The date must be any date or time at least an hour in the future.
It's normalized by returning just the date portion of the parsed input.
Note
For the age and date input, the sample uses the Microsoft/Recognizers-Text libraries to perform the initial parsing.
This is just one way to parse the input. For more information about these libraries, see the project's README.
private static bool ValidateName(string input, out string name, out string message)
{
name = null;
message = null;
if (string.IsNullOrWhiteSpace(input))
{
message = "Please enter a name that contains at least one character.";
}
else
{
name = input.Trim();
}
return message is null;
}
private static bool ValidateAge(string input, out int age, out string message)
{
age = 0;
message = null;
// Try to recognize the input as a number. This works for responses such as "twelve" as well as "12".
try
{
// Attempt to convert the Recognizer result to an integer. This works for "a dozen", "twelve", "12", and so on.
// The recognizer returns a list of potential recognition results, if any.
var results = NumberRecognizer.RecognizeNumber(input, Culture.English);
foreach (var result in results)
{
// The result resolution is a dictionary, where the "value" entry contains the processed string.
if (result.Resolution.TryGetValue("value", out var value))
{
age = Convert.ToInt32(value);
if (age >= 18 && age <= 120)
{
return true;
}
}
}
message = "Please enter an age between 18 and 120.";
}
catch
{
message = "I'm sorry, I could not interpret that as an age. Please enter an age between 18 and 120.";
}
return message is null;
}
private static bool ValidateDate(string input, out string date, out string message)
{
date = null;
message = null;
// Try to recognize the input as a date-time. This works for responses such as "11/14/2018", "9pm", "tomorrow", "Sunday at 5pm", and so on.
// The recognizer returns a list of potential recognition results, if any.
try
{
var results = DateTimeRecognizer.RecognizeDateTime(input, Culture.English);
// Check whether any of the recognized date-times are appropriate,
// and if so, return the first appropriate date-time. We're checking for a value at least an hour in the future.
var earliest = DateTime.Now.AddHours(1.0);
foreach (var result in results)
{
// The result resolution is a dictionary, where the "values" entry contains the processed input.
var resolutions = result.Resolution["values"] as List<Dictionary<string, string>>;
foreach (var resolution in resolutions)
{
// The processed input contains a "value" entry if it is a date-time value, or "start" and
// "end" entries if it is a date-time range.
if (resolution.TryGetValue("value", out var dateString)
|| resolution.TryGetValue("start", out dateString))
{
if (DateTime.TryParse(dateString, out var candidate)
&& earliest < candidate)
{
date = candidate.ToShortDateString();
return true;
}
}
}
}
message = "I'm sorry, please enter a date at least an hour out.";
}
catch
{
message = "I'm sorry, I could not interpret that as an appropriate date. Please enter a date at least an hour out.";
}
return false;
}
bots/customPromptBot.js
// Validates name input. Returns whether validation succeeded and either the parsed and normalized
// value or a message the bot can use to ask the user again.
static validateName(input) {
const name = input && input.trim();
return name !== undefined
? { success: true, name: name }
: { success: false, message: 'Please enter a name that contains at least one character.' };
};
// Validates age input. Returns whether validation succeeded and either the parsed and normalized
// value or a message the bot can use to ask the user again.
static validateAge(input) {
// Try to recognize the input as a number. This works for responses such as "twelve" as well as "12".
try {
// Attempt to convert the Recognizer result to an integer. This works for "a dozen", "twelve", "12", and so on.
// The recognizer returns a list of potential recognition results, if any.
const results = Recognizers.recognizeNumber(input, Recognizers.Culture.English);
let output;
results.forEach(result => {
// result.resolution is a dictionary, where the "value" entry contains the processed string.
const value = result.resolution.value;
if (value) {
const age = parseInt(value);
if (!isNaN(age) && age >= 18 && age <= 120) {
output = { success: true, age: age };
return;
}
}
});
return output || { success: false, message: 'Please enter an age between 18 and 120.' };
} catch (error) {
return {
success: false,
message: "I'm sorry, I could not interpret that as an age. Please enter an age between 18 and 120."
};
}
}
// Validates date input. Returns whether validation succeeded and either the parsed and normalized
// value or a message the bot can use to ask the user again.
static validateDate(input) {
// Try to recognize the input as a date-time. This works for responses such as "11/14/2018", "today at 9pm", "tomorrow", "Sunday at 5pm", and so on.
// The recognizer returns a list of potential recognition results, if any.
try {
const results = Recognizers.recognizeDateTime(input, Recognizers.Culture.English);
const now = new Date();
const earliest = now.getTime() + (60 * 60 * 1000);
let output;
results.forEach(result => {
// result.resolution is a dictionary, where the "values" entry contains the processed input.
result.resolution.values.forEach(resolution => {
// The processed input contains a "value" entry if it is a date-time value, or "start" and
// "end" entries if it is a date-time range.
const datevalue = resolution.value || resolution.start;
// If only time is given, assume it's for today.
const datetime = resolution.type === 'time'
? new Date(`${ now.toLocaleDateString() } ${ datevalue }`)
: new Date(datevalue);
if (datetime && earliest < datetime.getTime()) {
output = { success: true, date: datetime.toLocaleDateString() };
return;
}
});
});
return output || { success: false, message: "I'm sorry, please enter a date at least an hour out." };
} catch (error) {
return {
success: false,
message: "I'm sorry, I could not interpret that as an appropriate date. Please enter a date at least an hour out."
};
}
}
CustomPromptBot.java
private static Triple<Boolean, String, String> validateName(String input) {
String name = null;
String message = null;
if (StringUtils.isEmpty(input)) {
message = "Please enter a name that contains at least one character.";
} else {
name = input.trim();
}
return Triple.of(StringUtils.isBlank(message), name, message);
}
private static Triple<Boolean, Integer, String> ValidateAge(String input) {
int age = 0;
String message = null;
// Try to recognize the input as a number. This works for responses such as "twelve" as well as "12".
try {
// Attempt to convert the Recognizer result to an integer. This works for "a dozen", "twelve", "12", and so on.
// The recognizer returns a list of potential recognition results, if any.
List<ModelResult> results = NumberRecognizer.recognizeNumber(input, PromptCultureModels.ENGLISH_CULTURE);
for (ModelResult result : results) {
// The result resolution is a dictionary, where the "value" entry contains the processed String.
Object value = result.resolution.get("value");
if (value != null) {
age = Integer.parseInt((String) value);
if (age >= 18 && age <= 120) {
return Triple.of(true, age, "");
}
}
}
message = "Please enter an age between 18 and 120.";
}
catch (Throwable th) {
message = "I'm sorry, I could not interpret that as an age. Please enter an age between 18 and 120.";
}
return Triple.of(StringUtils.isBlank(message), age, message);
}
private static Triple<Boolean, String, String> ValidateDate(String input) {
String date = null;
String message = null;
// Try to recognize the input as a date-time. This works for responses such as "11/14/2018", "9pm", "tomorrow", "Sunday at 5pm", and so on.
// The recognizer returns a list of potential recognition results, if any.
try {
List<ModelResult> results = DateTimeRecognizer.recognizeDateTime(input, PromptCultureModels.ENGLISH_CULTURE);
// Check whether any of the recognized date-times are appropriate,
// and if so, return the first appropriate date-time. We're checking for a value at least an hour in the future.
LocalDateTime earliest = LocalDateTime.now().plus(1, ChronoUnit.HOURS);
for (ModelResult result : results) {
// The result resolution is a dictionary, where the "values" entry contains the processed input.
List<Map<String, Object>> resolutions = (List<Map<String, Object>>) result.resolution.get("values");
for (Map<String, Object> resolution : resolutions) {
// The processed input contains a "value" entry if it is a date-time value, or "start" and
// "end" entries if it is a date-time range.
String dateString = (String) resolution.get("value");
if (StringUtils.isBlank(dateString)) {
dateString = (String) resolution.get("start");
}
if (StringUtils.isNotBlank(dateString)){
DateTimeFormatter f = DateTimeFormatter.ofPattern("yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss");
LocalDateTime candidate;
try {
candidate = LocalDateTime.from(f.parse(dateString));
} catch (DateTimeParseException err) {
// If the input is a date, it will throw an exception and it will create a datetime
// with the MIN localtime
DateTimeFormatter d = DateTimeFormatter.ofPattern("yyyy-MM-dd");
candidate = LocalDateTime.of(LocalDate.parse(dateString, d), LocalDateTime.MIN.toLocalTime());
}
if (earliest.isBefore(candidate)) {
DateTimeFormatter dateformat = DateTimeFormatter.ofPattern("MM-dd-yyyy");
date = candidate.format(dateformat);
return Triple.of(true, date, message);
}
}
}
}
bots/custom_prompt_bot.py
def _validate_name(self, user_input: str) -> ValidationResult:
if not user_input:
return ValidationResult(
is_valid=False,
message="Please enter a name that contains at least one character.",
)
return ValidationResult(is_valid=True, value=user_input)
def _validate_age(self, user_input: str) -> ValidationResult:
# Attempt to convert the Recognizer result to an integer. This works for "a dozen", "twelve", "12", and so on.
# The recognizer returns a list of potential recognition results, if any.
results = recognize_number(user_input, Culture.English)
for result in results:
if "value" in result.resolution:
age = int(result.resolution["value"])
if 18 <= age <= 120:
return ValidationResult(is_valid=True, value=age)
return ValidationResult(
is_valid=False, message="Please enter an age between 18 and 120."
)
def _validate_date(self, user_input: str) -> ValidationResult:
try:
# Try to recognize the input as a date-time. This works for responses such as "11/14/2018", "9pm",
# "tomorrow", "Sunday at 5pm", and so on. The recognizer returns a list of potential recognition results,
# if any.
results = recognize_datetime(user_input, Culture.English)
for result in results:
for resolution in result.resolution["values"]:
if "value" in resolution:
now = datetime.now()
value = resolution["value"]
if resolution["type"] == "date":
candidate = datetime.strptime(value, "%Y-%m-%d")
elif resolution["type"] == "time":
candidate = datetime.strptime(value, "%H:%M:%S")
candidate = candidate.replace(
year=now.year, month=now.month, day=now.day
)
else:
candidate = datetime.strptime(value, "%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S")
# user response must be more than an hour out
diff = candidate - now
if diff.total_seconds() >= 3600:
return ValidationResult(
is_valid=True,
value=candidate.strftime("%m/%d/%y"),
)
return ValidationResult(
is_valid=False,
message="I'm sorry, please enter a date at least an hour out.",
)
except ValueError:
return ValidationResult(
is_valid=False,
message="I'm sorry, I could not interpret that as an appropriate "
"date. Please enter a date at least an hour out.",
)