Cast Actions
Cast Actions let developers create custom buttons which users can install into their action bar on any Farcaster application (see the spec).
Overview
At a glance:
- User installs Cast Action via specific deeplink or by clicking on
<Button.AddCastAction>
element with a specified target.castAction
route in a Frame. - When the user presses the Cast Action button in the App, the App will make a
POST
request to the.castAction
route. - Server performs any action and returns a response to the App which is shown as a toast.
Walkthrough
Here is a trivial example of how to expose an action with a frame. We will break it down below.
1. Render Frame & Add Action Intent
In the example above, we are rendering Add Action intent:
action
property is used to set the path to the cast action route.
app.frame('/', (c) => {
return c.res({
image: (
<div style={{ color: 'white', display: 'flex', fontSize: 60 }}>
Add "Log this!" Action
</div>
),
intents: [
<Button.AddCastAction action="/log-this">
Add
</Button.AddCastAction>,
]
})
})
// ...
2. Handle /log-this
Requests
Without a route handler to handle the Action request, the Cast Action will be meaningless.
To specify the name and icon for your action, the next properties are used in the action handler definition:
name
property is used to set the name of the action. It must be less than 30 charactersicon
property is used to associate your Cast Action with one of the Octicons. You can see the supported list here.- (optional)
description
property is used to describe your action, up to 80 characters. - (optional)
aboutUrl
property is used to show an "About" link when installing an action.
Let's define a /log-this
route to handle the Cast Action:
app.frame('/', (c) => {
return c.res({
image: (
<div style={{ color: 'white', display: 'flex', fontSize: 60 }}>
Add "Log this!" Action
</div>
),
intents: [
<Button.AddCastAction action="/log-this">
Add
</Button.AddCastAction>,
]
})
})
app.castAction(
'/log-this',
(c) => {
console.log(
`Cast Action to ${JSON.stringify(c.actionData.castId)} from ${
c.actionData.fid
}`,
)
return c.res({ type: 'message', message: 'Action Succeeded' })
},
{ name: "Log This!", icon: "log" })
)
A breakdown of the /log-this
route handler:
- We are responding with a
c.res
response and specifying amessage
that will appear in the success toast.
3. Bonus: Shorthand c.message
Instead of c.res({ type: 'message' })
, you can use a shorthand c.message(...)
.
app.castAction(
'/log-this',
(c) => {
console.log(
`Cast Action to ${JSON.stringify(c.actionData.castId)} from ${
c.actionData.fid
}`,
)
return c.message({ message: 'Action Succeeded' })
},
{ name: "Log This!", icon: "log" })
)
4. Bonus: Returning an error
You can return an error response for a Client to render an error toast by using c.error
.
app.castAction(
'/log-this',
(c) => {
console.log(
`Cast Action to ${JSON.stringify(c.actionData.castId)} from ${
c.actionData.fid
}`,
)
return c.error({ message: 'Action Failed' })
},
{ name: "Log This!", icon: "log" })
)
5. Bonus: Learn the API
You can learn more about the transaction APIs here: