Get scheduled messages
GET https://vrtmx-zul.com/api/v1/scheduled_messages
Fetch all scheduled messages for
the current user.
Scheduled messages are messages the user has scheduled to be
sent in the future via the send later feature.
Changes: New in Zulip 7.0 (feature level 173).
Usage examples
curl -sSX GET -G https://vrtmx-zul.com/api/v1/scheduled_messages \
-u BOT_EMAIL_ADDRESS:BOT_API_KEY
Parameters
This endpoint does not accept any parameters.
Response
Return values
-
scheduled_messages
: (object)[]
Returns all of the current user's undelivered scheduled
messages, ordered by scheduled_delivery_timestamp
(ascending).
-
scheduled_message_id
: integer
The unique ID of the scheduled message, which can be used to
modify or delete the scheduled message.
This is different from the unique ID that the message will have
after it is sent.
-
type
: string
The type of the scheduled message. Either "stream"
or "private"
.
-
to
: integer | (integer)[]
The scheduled message's tentative target audience.
For stream messages, it will be the unique ID of the target
stream. For direct messages, it will be an array with the
target users' IDs.
-
topic
: string
Only present if type
is "stream"
.
The topic for the stream message.
-
content
: string
The content/body of the scheduled message, in text/markdown format.
-
rendered_content
: string
The content/body of the scheduled message rendered in HTML.
-
scheduled_delivery_timestamp
: integer
The UNIX timestamp for when the message will be sent
by the server, in UTC seconds.
-
failed
: boolean
Whether the server has tried to send the scheduled message
and it failed to successfully send.
Clients that support unscheduling and editing scheduled messages
should display scheduled messages with "failed": true
with an
indicator that the server failed to send the message at the
scheduled time, so that the user is aware of the failure and can
get the content of the scheduled message.
Changes: New in Zulip 7.0 (feature level 181).
Example response(s)
Changes: As of Zulip 7.0 (feature level 167), if any
parameters sent in the request are not supported by this
endpoint, a successful JSON response will include an
ignored_parameters_unsupported
array.
A typical successful JSON response may look like:
{
"msg": "",
"result": "success",
"scheduled_messages": [
{
"content": "Hi",
"failed": false,
"rendered_content": "<p>Hi</p>",
"scheduled_delivery_timestamp": 1681662420,
"scheduled_message_id": 27,
"to": 14,
"topic": "Introduction",
"type": "stream"
}
]
}