### Event annotations and reactions {{% added-in v="1.7" %}} #### `m.annotation` relationship type Annotations are events that use an [event relationship](#forming-relationships-between-events) with a `rel_type` of `m.annotation`. Annotations are normally used for "reactions": for example, if the user wants to react to an event with a thumbs-up, then the client sends an annotation event with the corresponding emoji (👍). Another potential usage is to allow bots to send an event indicating the success or failure of a command. Along with the normal properties `event_id` and `rel_type`, an `m.relates_to` property with `rel_type: m.annotation` should contain a `key` that indicates the annotation being applied. For example, when reacting with emojis, the key contains the emoji being used. An example `m.annotation` relationship is shown below: ```json "m.relates_to": { "rel_type": "m.annotation", "event_id": "$some_event_id", "key": "👍" } ``` {{% boxes/note %}} Any `type` of event is eligible for an annotation, including state events. {{% /boxes/note %}} #### Events {{% event event="m.reaction" %}} #### Client behaviour {id="annotations-client-behaviour"} The intention of annotations is that they are counted up, rather than being displayed individually. Clients must keep count of the number of annotations with a given event `type` and annotation `key` they observe for each event; these counts are typically presented alongside the event in the timeline. When performing this count: * Each event `type` and annotation `key` should normally be counted separately, though whether to actually do so is an implementation decision. * Annotation events sent by [ignored users](#ignoring-users) should be excluded from the count. * Multiple identical annotations (i.e., with the same event `type` and annotation `key`) from the same user (i.e., events with the same `sender`) should be treated as a single annotation. * Implementations should ignore any annotation event which refers to an event which itself has an `m.relates_to` with `rel_type: m.annotation` or `rel_type: m.replace`. In other words, it is not possible to annotate a [replacement event](#event-replacements) or an annotation. Annotations should instead refer to the original event. * When an annotation is redacted, it is removed from the count. {{% boxes/note %}} It is not possible to edit a reaction, since replacement events do not change `m.relates_to` (see [Applying `m.new_content`](#applying-mnew_content)), and there is no other meaningful content within `m.reaction`. If a user wishes to change their reaction, the original reaction should be redacted and a new one sent in its place. {{% /boxes/note %}} {{% boxes/note %}} The `key` field in `m.reaction` can be any string so clients must take care to render long reactions in a sensible manner. For example, clients can elide overly-long reactions. {{% /boxes/note %}} #### Server behaviour ##### Avoiding duplicate annotations Homeservers should prevent users from sending a second annotation for a given event with identical event `type` and annotation `key` (unless the first event has been redacted). Attempts to send such an annotation should be rejected with a 400 error and an error code of `M_DUPLICATE_ANNOTATION`. Note that this does not guarantee that duplicate annotations will not arrive over federation. Clients are responsible for deduplicating received annotations when [counting annotations](#annotations-client-behaviour). ##### Server-side aggregation of `m.annotation` relationships `m.annotation` relationships are *not* [aggregated](#aggregations-of-child-events) by the server. In other words, `m.annotation` is not included in the `m.relations` property.