A Ruby SDK to the https://api.ai natural language processing service.
gem install api-ai-ruby
Just pass correct credentials to ApiAiRuby::Client constructor
client = ApiAiRuby::Client.new(
:client_access_token => 'YOUR_CLIENT_ACCESS_TOKEN',
)
After that you can send text requests to the https://api.ai with command
response = client.text_request 'hello!'
And voice requests with file stream
file = File.new 'hello.wav'
response = client.voice_request(file)
Example answer:
{
:id => "6daf5ab7-276c-43ad-a32d-bf6831918492",
:timestamp => "2015-12-22T08:42:15.785Z",
:result => {
:source => "agent",
:resolvedQuery => "Hello",
:speech => "Hi! How are you?",
:action => "greeting",
:parameters => {},
:contexts => [],
:metadata => {
:intentId => "a5d685ab-1f19-46b0-9478-69f794553668",
:intentName => "hello"
}
},
:status => {
:code => 200,
:errorType => "success"
}
}
voice_request and text_request methods returns symbolized https://api.ai response. Structure of response can be found at https://docs.api.ai/docs/query#response.
During client instantiating you can additionally set parameters like api url, request language and version (more info at https://docs.api.ai/docs/versioning, https://docs.api.ai/docs/languages)
ApiAiRuby::Client.new(
client_access_token: 'YOUR_ACCESS_TOKEN',
api_lang: 'FR',
api_base_url: 'http://example.com/v1/',
api_version: 'YYYYMMDD'
)
And you also can send additional data to server during request, use second parameter of text_request and voice_request methods to do that
response = client.text_request 'Hello', :contexts => ['firstContext'], :resetContexts => true
response = client.voice_request file, :timezone => "America/New_York"
More information about possible parameters can be found at https://docs.api.ai/docs/query page
#Error handling ApiAiRuby::Client currently able to raise two kind of errors: ApiAiRuby::ClientError (due to configuration mismatch) and ApiAiRuby::RequestError in case of something goes wrong during request. For both kind of errors you can get error.message (as usual) and ApiAiRuby::RequestError can additionally give you code of server error (you can get it with error.code)