Manual:Pywikibot/welcome.py

In other languages: it

Welcome.py is a script of the Pywikipedia bot framework used to welcome new users. This script works out of the box for wikis that have been defined in the script. It is currently used on the Dutch, Norwegian and Italian Wikipedia, and Wikimedia Commons and English Wikiquote.

If you want download the latest version of this code use SVN or copy the script from this wiki.

Ensure you have community support before running this bot!

URLs to current implementations

 * Arabic Wikipedia: http://ar.wikipedia.org/wiki/ويكيبيديا:سجل_الترحيب
 * Wikimedia Commons: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:Welcome_log
 * Dutch Wikipedia: http://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Logboek_welkom
 * Italian Wikipedia: http://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Benvenuto_log
 * English Wikiquote: http://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Wikiquote:Welcome_log
 * Persian Wikipedia: http://fa.wikipedia.org/wiki/ویکی‌پدیا:سیاهه_خوشامد
 * Korean Wikipedia: http://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/위키백과:Welcome_log

Because of the fact that every project has different settings, the Bot won't work if you don't put the right translation of the dictionaries that are already in the script.

Description of basic functionality

 * Request a list of new users every period (default: 3600 seconds)
 * Check if new user has passed a threshold for a number of edits (default: 1 edit)
 * Optional: check username for bad words in the username or if the username consists solely of numbers; log this somewhere on the wiki (default: False)
 * If user has made any edits, check if user has an empty talk page
 * If user had an empty talk page, add a welcome message
 * Optional: Once the set number of users have been welcomed, add this to the configured log page, one for each day (default: True)
 * If no log page exists, create a header for the log page first.

Parameters
This script (by default not yet implemented) uses two templates that need to be on the local wiki:
 * : contains mark up code for log entries (just copy it from Commons)
 * : contains the information for new users

This script understands the following command-line arguments:

-edit[:#]     Define how many edits a new user needs to be welcomed (default: 1, max: 50)

-time[:#]     Define how many seconds the bot sleeps before restart (default: 3600)

-break        Use it if you don't want that the Bot restart at the end (it will break) (default: False)

-nlog         Use this parameter if you do not want the bot to log all welcomed users (default: False)

-limit[:#]    Use this parameter to define how may users should be                   checked (default:50)

-offset[:TIME] Skip the latest new users (those newer than TIME) to give interactive users a chance to welcome the new users (default: now) Timezone is the server timezone, GMT for Wikimedia TIME format : yyyymmddhhmmss

-timeoffset[:#] Skip the latest new users, accounts newer than # minutes

-numberlog[:#] The number of users to welcome before refreshing the welcome log (default: 4)

-filter       Enable the username checks for bad names (default: False)

-ask          Use this parameter if you want to confirm each possible bad username (default: False)

-random       Use a random signature, taking the signatures from a wiki page (for istruction, see below).

-file[:#]     Use a file instead of a wikipage to take the random sign. N.B. If you use this parameter, you don't need to use -random.

-savedata     This feature saves the random signature index to allow to                   continue to welcome with the last signature used.

Extra-functionality guide
Report, Bad Word and White List Guide:
 * 1) Set in the code which page it will use to load the bad word list, the white list and the report.
 * 2) In these pages you have to add a "tuple" with the names that you want to add in the two lists. For example: ('cat', 'mouse', 'dog'). You can also write other text in the page; it will work without problems.
 * 3) What will the two pages do? Well, the Bot will check if a badword is in the username and set the "warning" to True. Then the Bot checks if a word of the white list is in the username. If yes, it removes the word and rechecks in the bad-word list to see if there are other bad words in the username.
 * 4) Example:
 * 5) * dio is a badword
 * 6) * Claudio is a normal name
 * 7) * The username is "Claudio90 fuck!"
 * 8) * The Bot find dio and set "warning"
 * 9) * The Bot find Claudio and set "ok"
 * 10) * The Bot find fuck at the end and set "warning"
 * 11) * Result: The username is reported.
 * 12) When a user is reported you have to check him and do the following:
 * 13) * If he's ok, put out the
 * 14) * If he's not, block him
 * 15) * You can decide to put in a "you are blocked, change to another username" template or not.
 * 16) * Delete the username from the page.

Important: The Bot checks the user in this order:
 * Searches to see if he has a talkpage (if yes, skip).
 * Searches to see if he's blocked, if yes he will be skipped.
 * Searchs to see if he's in the report page, if yes he will be skipped.
 * If no, he will be reported.

Random sign guide
* SIGN Example:
 * Set the page that the bot will load
 * Add the signs in this way:

Note: The white space and    aren't required but I suggest you to use them. ''You can find other examples, here.

Known issues/FIXMEs

 * exits when wiki is down.
 * add variable for how many users to skip (f.e. the 10 latest users, that may not have made any edits)
 * use default pages if a wiki is not configured, so no configuration of the script would be required at all. Suggestion: use English language defaults.
 * The regex to load the user might be slightly different from project to project. (in this case, write to Filnik for help...)
 * If the User talk: translation has non-standard character it won't work.
 * Add in the report, the badword used to detect the user.