nestjs-telegraf/website/versioned_docs/version-2.6/migrating/from-v1-to-v2.md

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2023-07-23 15:28:11 +03:00
---
id: from-v1-to-v2
title: From v1 to v2
sidebar_label: From v1 to v2
slug: /migrating/from-v1-to-v2
---
## Remove `Telegraf` prefix
If you previously used decorators with the prefix `Telegraf` in the decorator name (such as `@TelegrafOn()` or `@TelegrafHelp()`) replace them with the same decorators but without the prefix `Telegraf`, such as `@On()`, `@Start()`, `@Command()` and so on.
## `@Update()` decorator
Since v2, `nestjs-telegraf` looks for all update handlers only inside individual classes, under the `@Update()` decorator.
Previously, you could declare a handler anywhere, for example:
```typescript title="src/cats/cats.provider.ts"
import { Injectable } from '@nestjs/common';
import { Command } from 'nestjs-telegraf';
@Injectable()
export class CatsProvider {
@Command('cats')
async helpCommand(ctx: TelegrafContext) {
await ctx.reply('Meow.');
}
}
```
Now you must explicitly bind the class, for Telegram Bot Api update handlers:
```typescript {3} title="src/cats/cats.updates.ts"
import { Update, Ctx } from 'nestjs-telegraf';
@Update()
export class HelpUpdate {
@Command('help')
async helpCommand(@Ctx() ctx: TelegrafContext) {
await ctx.reply('Help command.');
}
}
```
Treat the `@Update()` decorator like the `@Controller()` decorator, but to capture Telegram Bot Api updates.