A fork of discord.py. Pycord is a modern, easy to use, feature-rich, and async ready API wrapper for Discord written in Python.
- Modern Pythonic API using
async
andawait
. - Proper rate limit handling.
- Optimised for both speed and memory usage.
- Full Application Command Support
Python 3.8 or higher is required
To install the library without full voice support, run the following command:
# Linux/macOS
python3 -m pip install -U py-cord
# Windows
py -3 -m pip install -U py-cord
Otherwise, to get full voice support, run the following command:
# Linux/macOS
python3 -m pip install -U "py-cord[voice]"
# Windows
py -3 -m pip install -U py-cord[voice]
To install additional packages for speedup, run the following command:
# Linux/macOS
python3 -m pip install -U "py-cord[speed]"
# Windows
py -3 -m pip install -U py-cord[speed]
To install the development version, do the following:
$ git clone https://github.com/Pycord-Development/pycord
$ cd pycord
$ python3 -m pip install -U .[voice]
or if you do not want to clone the repository:
# Linux/macOS
python3 -m pip install git+https://github.com/Pycord-Development/pycord
# Windows
py -3 -m pip install git+https://github.com/Pycord-Development/pycord
- PyNaCl (for voice support)
- aiodns, brotlipy, cchardet (for aiohttp speedup)
- orjson (for json speedup)
Please note that while installing voice support on Linux, you must install the following packages via your preferred package manager (e.g. apt
, dnf
, etc) BEFORE running the above commands:
- libffi-dev (or
libffi-devel
on some systems) - python-dev (e.g.
python3.10-dev
for Python 3.10)
import discord
bot = discord.Bot()
@bot.slash_command()
async def hello(ctx, name: str = None):
name = name or ctx.author.name
await ctx.respond(f"Hello {name}!")
@bot.user_command(name="Say Hello")
async def hi(ctx, user):
await ctx.respond(f"{ctx.author.mention} says hello to {user.name}!")
bot.run("token")
import discord
from discord.ext import commands
intents = discord.Intents.default()
intents.message_content = True
bot = commands.Bot(command_prefix=">", intents=intents)
@bot.command()
async def ping(ctx):
await ctx.send("pong")
bot.run("token")
You can find more code examples in the examples
directory.
Note: Make sure you do not reveal your bot token to anyone, as it can grant access to your bot.