Fetch a single message

GET https://zulip.bigw.org/api/v1/messages/{message_id}

Given a message ID, return the message object.

Additionally, a raw_content field is included. This field is useful for clients that primarily work with HTML-rendered messages but might need to occasionally fetch the message's raw Markdown (e.g. for view source or prefilling a message edit textarea).

Changes: Before Zulip 5.0 (feature level 120), this endpoint only returned the raw_content field.

Usage examples

#!/usr/bin/env python3

import zulip

# Pass the path to your zuliprc file here.
client = zulip.Client(config_file="~/zuliprc")

# Get the raw content of a message given the message's ID.
result = client.get_raw_message(message_id)
print(result)

curl -sSX GET -G https://zulip.bigw.org/api/v1/messages/43 \
    -u BOT_EMAIL_ADDRESS:BOT_API_KEY \
    --data-urlencode apply_markdown=false

Parameters

message_id integer required in path

Example: 43

The target message's ID.


apply_markdown boolean optional

Example: false

If true, message content is returned in the rendered HTML format. If false, message content is returned in the raw Markdown-format text that user entered.

Changes: New in Zulip 5.0 (feature level 120).

Defaults to true.


Response

Return values

  • raw_content: string

    The raw Markdown content of the message.

    Deprecated and to be removed once no longer required for legacy clients. Modern clients should prefer passing "apply_markdown": false to request raw message content.

  • message: object

    An object containing details of the message.

    Changes: New in Zulip 5.0 (feature level 120).

    • avatar_url: string | null

      The URL of the message sender's avatar. Can be null only if the current user has access to the sender's real email address and client_gravatar was true.

      If null, then the sender has not uploaded an avatar in Zulip, and the client can compute the gravatar URL by hashing the sender's email address, which corresponds in this case to their real email address.

      Changes: Before Zulip 7.0 (feature level 163), access to a user's real email address was a realm-level setting. As of this feature level, email_address_visibility is a user setting.

    • client: string

      A Zulip "client" string, describing what Zulip client sent the message.

    • content: string

      The content/body of the message.

    • content_type: string

      The HTTP content_type for the message content. This will be text/html or text/x-markdown, depending on whether apply_markdown was set.

    • display_recipient: string | (object)[]

      Data on the recipient of the message; either the name of a channel or a dictionary containing basic data on the users who received the message.

    • edit_history: (object)[]

      An array of objects, with each object documenting the changes in a previous edit made to the message, ordered chronologically from most recent to least recent edit.

      Not present if the message has never been edited or if the realm has disabled viewing of message edit history.

      Every object will contain user_id and timestamp.

      The other fields are optional, and will be present or not depending on whether the channel, topic, and/or message content were modified in the edit event. For example, if only the topic was edited, only prev_topic and topic will be present in addition to user_id and timestamp.

      • prev_content: string

        Only present if message's content was edited.

        The content of the message immediately prior to this edit event.

      • prev_rendered_content: string

        Only present if message's content was edited.

        The rendered HTML representation of prev_content.

      • prev_rendered_content_version: integer

        Only present if message's content was edited.

        The Markdown processor version number for the message immediately prior to this edit event.

      • prev_stream: integer

        Only present if message's channel was edited.

        The channel ID of the message immediately prior to this edit event.

        Changes: New in Zulip 3.0 (feature level 1).

      • prev_topic: string

        Only present if message's topic was edited.

        The topic of the message immediately prior to this edit event.

        Changes: New in Zulip 5.0 (feature level 118). Previously, this field was called prev_subject; clients are recommended to rename prev_subject to prev_topic if present for compatibility with older Zulip servers.

      • stream: integer

        Only present if message's channel was edited.

        The ID of the channel containing the message immediately after this edit event.

        Changes: New in Zulip 5.0 (feature level 118).

      • timestamp: integer

        The UNIX timestamp for the edit.

      • topic: string

        Only present if message's topic was edited.

        The topic of the message immediately after this edit event.

        Changes: New in Zulip 5.0 (feature level 118).

      • user_id: integer | null

        The ID of the user that made the edit.

        Will be null only for edit history events predating March 2017.

        Clients can display edit history events where this is null as modified by either the sender (for content edits) or an unknown user (for topic edits).

    • id: integer

      The unique message ID. Messages should always be displayed sorted by ID.

    • is_me_message: boolean

      Whether the message is a /me status message

    • last_edit_timestamp: integer

      The UNIX timestamp for when the message was last edited, in UTC seconds.

      Not present if the message has never been edited.

    • reactions: (object)[]

      Data on any reactions to the message.

      • emoji_name: string

        Name of the emoji.

      • emoji_code: string

        A unique identifier, defining the specific emoji codepoint requested, within the namespace of the reaction_type.

      • reaction_type: string

        A string indicating the type of emoji. Each emoji reaction_type has an independent namespace for values of emoji_code.

        Must be one of the following values:

        • unicode_emoji : In this namespace, emoji_code will be a dash-separated hex encoding of the sequence of Unicode codepoints that define this emoji in the Unicode specification.

        • realm_emoji : In this namespace, emoji_code will be the ID of the uploaded custom emoji.

        • zulip_extra_emoji : These are special emoji included with Zulip. In this namespace, emoji_code will be the name of the emoji (e.g. "zulip").

      • user_id: integer

        The ID of the user who added the reaction.

        Changes: New in Zulip 3.0 (feature level 2). The user object is deprecated and will be removed in the future.

      • user: object

        Dictionary with data on the user who added the reaction, including the user ID as the id field. Note that reactions data received from the events API has a slightly different user dictionary format, with the user ID field called user_id instead.

        Changes: Deprecated and to be removed in a future release once core clients have migrated to use the adjacent user_id field, which was introduced in Zulip 3.0 (feature level 2). Clients supporting older Zulip server versions should use the user ID mentioned in the description above as they would the user_id field.

        • id: integer

          ID of the user.

        • email: string

          Zulip API email of the user.

        • full_name: string

          Full name of the user.

        • is_mirror_dummy: boolean

          Whether the user is a mirror dummy.

    • recipient_id: integer

      A unique ID for the set of users receiving the message (either a channel or group of users). Useful primarily for hashing.

    • sender_email: string

      The Zulip API email address of the message's sender.

    • sender_full_name: string

      The full name of the message's sender.

    • sender_id: integer

      The user ID of the message's sender.

    • sender_realm_str: string

      A string identifier for the realm the sender is in. Unique only within the context of a given Zulip server.

      E.g. on example.zulip.com, this will be example.

    • stream_id: integer

      Only present for channel messages; the ID of the channel.

    • subject: string

      The topic of the message. Currently always "" for direct messages, though this could change if Zulip adds support for topics in direct message conversations.

      The field name is a legacy holdover from when topics were called "subjects" and will eventually change.

    • submessages: (object)[]

      Data used for certain experimental Zulip integrations.

      • msg_type: string

        The type of the message.

      • content: string

        The new content of the submessage.

      • message_id: integer

        The ID of the message to which the submessage has been added.

      • sender_id: integer

        The ID of the user who sent the message.

      • id: integer

        The ID of the submessage.

    • timestamp: integer

      The UNIX timestamp for when the message was sent, in UTC seconds.

    • topic_links: (object)[]

      Data on any links to be included in the topic line (these are generated by custom linkification filters that match content in the message's topic.)

      Changes: This field contained a list of urls before Zulip 4.0 (feature level 46).

      New in Zulip 3.0 (feature level 1). Previously, this field was called subject_links; clients are recommended to rename subject_links to topic_links if present for compatibility with older Zulip servers.

      • text: string

        The original link text present in the topic.

      • url: string

        The expanded target url which the link points to.

    • type: string

      The type of the message: "stream" or "private".

    • flags: (string)[]

      The user's message flags for the message.

      Changes: In Zulip 8.0 (feature level 224), the wildcard_mentioned flag was deprecated in favor of the stream_wildcard_mentioned and topic_wildcard_mentioned flags. The wildcard_mentioned flag exists for backwards compatibility with older clients and equals stream_wildcard_mentioned || topic_wildcard_mentioned. Clients supporting older server versions should treat this field as a previous name for the stream_wildcard_mentioned flag as topic wildcard mentions were not available prior to this feature level.

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:

{
    "message": {
        "avatar_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/6d8cad0fd00256e7b40691d27ddfd466?d=identicon&version=1",
        "client": "populate_db",
        "content": "<p>Security experts agree that relational algorithms are an interesting new topic in the field of networking, and scholars concur.</p>",
        "content_type": "text/html",
        "display_recipient": [
            {
                "email": "hamlet@zulip.com",
                "full_name": "King Hamlet",
                "id": 4,
                "is_mirror_dummy": false
            },
            {
                "email": "iago@zulip.com",
                "full_name": "Iago",
                "id": 5,
                "is_mirror_dummy": false
            },
            {
                "email": "prospero@zulip.com",
                "full_name": "Prospero from The Tempest",
                "id": 8,
                "is_mirror_dummy": false
            }
        ],
        "flags": [
            "read"
        ],
        "id": 16,
        "is_me_message": false,
        "reactions": [],
        "recipient_id": 27,
        "sender_email": "hamlet@zulip.com",
        "sender_full_name": "King Hamlet",
        "sender_id": 4,
        "sender_realm_str": "zulip",
        "subject": "",
        "submessages": [],
        "timestamp": 1527921326,
        "topic_links": [],
        "type": "private"
    },
    "msg": "",
    "raw_content": "**Don't** forget your towel!",
    "result": "success"
}

An example JSON response for when the specified message does not exist or it is not visible to the user making the query (e.g. it was a direct message between two other users):

{
    "code": "BAD_REQUEST",
    "msg": "Invalid message(s)",
    "result": "error"
}