Slack is a channel-based messaging platform. With Slack, people can work together more effectively, connect all their software tools and services, and find the information they need to do their best work — all within a secure, enterprise-grade environment.
Emit new event when a new message is posted to one or more channels
Emit new event when a message was posted in a direct message channel
Emit new events on new Slack interactivity events sourced from Block Kit interactive elements, Slash commands, or Shortcuts.
Emit new event when a specific keyword is mentioned in a channel
Send a message to a user, group, private channel or public channel. See the documentation
Batch create entities, See REST docs and client API docs
Configure custom blocks and send to a channel, group, or user. See the documentation.
Creates an Entity Type, See REST docs and client API docs
The Pipedream Slack app enables you to build event-driven workflows that interact with the Slack API. Once you authorize the Pipedream app's access to your workspace, you can use Pipedream workflows to perform common Slack actions or write your own code against the Slack API.
The Pipedream Slack app is not a typical app. You don't interact with it directly as a bot, and it doesn't add custom functionality to your workspace out of the box. It makes it easier to automate anything you'd typically use the Slack API for, using Pipedream workflows.
import { axios } from "@pipedream/platform"
export default defineComponent({
props: {
slack: {
type: "app",
app: "slack",
}
},
async run({steps, $}) {
return await axios($, {
url: `https://slack.com/api/users.profile.get`,
headers: {
Authorization: `Bearer ${this.slack.$auth.oauth_access_token}`,
},
})
},
})
Google Dialogflow API empowers you to create conversational interfaces for websites, apps, and messaging platforms. Think chatbots that can engage in human-like dialogue, provide customer support, guide through sales processes, or control smart home devices with voice commands. With Pipedream's integration capabilities, you can create automated workflows that trigger actions in other apps based on Dialogflow's processed input, enabling seamless interaction across a plethora of services.
module.exports = defineComponent({
props: {
google_dialogflow: {
type: "app",
app: "google_dialogflow",
}
},
async run({steps, $}) {
// Example code from the Dialogflow Node.js library:
// https://github.com/googleapis/nodejs-dialogflow
const dialogflow = require('dialogflow')
const uuid = require('uuid')
// A unique identifier for the given session
const sessionId = uuid.v4()
const key = JSON.parse(this.google_dialogflow.$auth.key_json)
// Creates a session client from a Google service account key.
const sessionClient = new dialogflow.SessionsClient({
projectId: key.project_id,
credentials: {
client_email: key.client_email,
private_key: key.private_key,
}
})
const sessionPath = sessionClient.sessionPath(key.project_id, sessionId)
// The text query request.
const request = {
session: sessionPath,
queryInput: {
text: {
// The query to send to the dialogflow agent
text: 'hello',
// The language used by the client (en-US)
languageCode: 'en-US',
},
},
}
// Send request and log result
const responses = await sessionClient.detectIntent(request)
console.log('Detected intent')
const result = responses[0].queryResult
console.log(`Query: ${result.queryText}`)
console.log(`Response: ${result.fulfillmentText}`)
if (result.intent) {
console.log(`Intent: ${result.intent.displayName}`)
} else {
console.log(`No intent matched.`)
}
},
})