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Message (Bot Response) Nodes

The Message Node is used to deliver a message to the user. Message nodes commonly follow an API, web service call, or webhook event to define their results as a formatted response.

You can format bot responses as below:

  • Plain text: Type a message in plain text. You can use stored context values with {{variable brackets}}. For example: 'Hello {{context.session.UserContext.firstName}}. How can I help you?'
  • Javascript: Compose JavaScript responses either:
    • For dynamically constructing messages using context and session variables.
    • for displaying templates or widgets as supported by various channels.
      For example, you can compose a JavaScript message for Facebook Channel to present a Carousel template.
    • Optionally, you can generate links to view the information in an HTML report format using templates and share the URL with the bot message.

For example, the Book Flights sample dialog uses the following message nodes:

  • WeatherReport: This shows the weather details returned by the WeatherApi Service node, formatted using the LocationScript node.
  • FinalFlightinfo: This shows the flight itineraries that the Flights info service node returns.
  • Thanks: After showing the final flight details, prompts the user if they have any other requests.

To understand customized JavaScript responses and channel-specific templates, refer to Customize JavaScript Responses in User Prompts article.

Set-Up

Setting up a Message node in a dialog task involves the following steps:

Add Node

  1. Open the dialog task to add the Message node.
  2. Add a message node in the designated place. For steps in adding nodes, read the Using the Dialog Builder article.

    Note

    You can add a message node within an existing sequence or outside any existing sequence. If you add it outside, a new, untitled sequence will automatically get created containing the new message node.

  3. The Message window is displayed with the Component Properties tab selected by default.

Configure Node

Component Properties

Note

The configurations you set up or edit in this section reflect in all other dialog tasks that use this node.

  1. On the Component Properties tab, enter a Name and Display Name for the message node.
  2. Under the Bot Responses section, compose and format the bot response either as plain text or as a JavaScript message. A default message is set by the platform, you can customize it.
  3. Enter channel-specific messages for bot responses using the Manage link. For more information, read the Using the Prompt Editor article.
  4. To add more bot responses, click Add Bot Response and repeat the above steps.
  5. Use the Rephrase Responses to rewrite VA replies using AI based on conversation,context and user emotions. For Message nodes, this feature helps rephrase the responses entered under Bot Responses. To see this feature in your node’s Component Properties, enable the OpenAI or Azure-OpenAI integration and the Dynamic Prompt and Message Rephrasing feature under LLM and Generative AI. By default, this feature is disabled for each node. Turn on the toggle to enable Rephrase Responses. Adjusting the settings allows you to fine-tune the model’s behavior to meet your needs. The default settings work fine for most cases. However, if required, you can tweak the settings and find the right balance for your use case.

    Message node - Rephrase Responses

    • Model: The default model for which the settings are displayed. You can choose another supported mode if it’s configured. If you select a non-default model, it’s used for this node only. If you want to change the default model, you can select the model in the drop-down list and use the Mark Default option shown next to its name.
    • No of previous user inputs: Configure the number of previous user inputs to define how many previous user messages should be sent to OpenAI as context based on which to rephrase the response sent through the node. You can choose between 0 and 5, where 0 means that no previous input is considered, while 5 means that the previous 5 responses are sent as context.
    • Additional Instruction: Add a brief description of the use case context to guide the model.
    • Temperature: The setting controls the randomness of the model’s output. A higher temperature, like 0.8 or above, can result in unexpected, creative, and less relevant responses. On the other hand, a lower temperature, like 0.5 or below, makes the output more focused and relevant.
    • Max Tokens: It indicates the total number of tokens used in the API call to the model. It affects the cost and the time taken to receive a response. A token can be as short as one character or as long as one word, depending on the text.
    • Fallback Behaviour: If the rephrase response fails, use the original user query.

The Message node allows you to generate links to view the information in an HTML report format using templates. The URL link is added to the bot message. When you add a link to a bot response, the users can select the link and get more details, such as a table of values for Closed Sales Opportunities in the SalesForce Bot.

To generate a report link, follow these steps:

  1. On the Component Properties tab, under the Report URL section, click Generate Report Link.

    Message node - Generate report

  2. On the Generate Report dialog box, enter the following values:

    1. Link Title – The link text displayed in the bot channel. For example, View Shopping Cart.
    2. Header – The title of the report. For example, These are the items in your Shopping Cart.
    3. Details – End-user help information displayed directly below the header, describing the content of the report. For example, Review your Shopping Cart, and then click Continue when you are ready to place your order.
    4. Data Path – Path for the data, usually the response from the web service. For example, context.ShoppingCartService.response.body
    5. Template – Select one of the following format templates to display the data from the task response. For each type, define the Column Name, Key Mapping, Data Type, and template-specific options.
      • Table – Uses a table format with defined columns. Each mapping for the Table template is set to Is Sortable, Display as an image, and Display it as a link. For more information, refer to the Defining a Table Report article and Report Link community post.
      • Fixed Column Table – Uses a table format with one or more columns fixed. Each mapping for the Fixed Column Table template is set to Is Sortable, Column in fixed, Display as an image, and Display it as a link. For more information, refer to the Defining a Fixed-Column Table Report article.
      • Card Layout – Uses a contact card format. Each mapping for the Card Layout template is set to Is Sortable, Display as an image, and Display it as a link. For more information, refer to the Defining a Card Layout Report article.
      • Weather Info – Define a date for a weather service response payload. Each mapping for the Weather Info template is set to Is Sortable, Display as an image, and Display it as a link. For more information, refer to Defining a Weather Info Report article.
      • Card Layout with Group By – Shows a list of items grouped by a specific field. For more information, refer to the Define a Card Layout with Group By Report article.
  3. Click Save.

Variable Namespace

In the Variable Namespaces section, associate the variable namespaces to execute this node and its transitions. This option is visible only when the Variable Namespace is enabled for the bot. You can go with the task level settings or customize it for this node. For more information, refer to Managing Namespace.

Instance Properties

  1. On the Message window, click the Instance Properties tab.
  2. Under the Interruptions Behavior section, you can configure the interruptions behavior for this node.

    Note

    The settings in the Instance Properties tab are specific to the current task and do not reflect in other dialog tasks that use this node.

    1. Use the task level ‘Interruptions Behavior’ setting: The bot refers to the Interruptions Behavior settings set at the dialog task level.
    2. Customize for this node option: You can customize the Interruptions Behavior settings for this node by selecting this option and configuring the same. For more information, refer to the Interruption Handling and Context Switching article.
  3. Under the Custom Tags section, add tags to build custom profiles of your bot conversations. Click here for more.

IVR Properties

Use the IVR properties tab on the Message Node to define the initial prompts, timeout prompts, no match prompts, and error prompts with customization for the retries behavior, input mode, grammar settings for Global and Node level use cases, prompts, and call behavior parameters for this node to use in IVR Channel. These settings are defined at the Message Node level. For more information, read the Voice Call Properties article.

Note

The Message Node supports all voice call properties for the IVR, Audio Codes, Twilio Voice, and Voice Gateway channels provided the On User Input Transition setting is enabled for the node.

Message node - Voice call properties

Connections Properties

Note

If the node is at the bottom in the sequence, then only the connection property is visible.

From the node’s Connections tab, you can determine the node in the dialog task to execute next. You can write the conditional statements based on the values of any Entity or Context Objects in the dialog task, or you can use intents for transitions.

To setup Component Transitions, follow these steps:

  1. On the Message window, click the Connections tab.
  2. On the Connections tab, under the Connection Rules section, you can select nodes from the Default drop-down list.
  3. To configure a conditional flow, click Add IF.
  4. Configure the conditional expression based on one of the following criteria:

    1. Entity: Compare an entity node in the dialog with a specific value using one of these operators:

      1. exists
      2. equals to
      3. greater than equals to
      4. less than equals to
      5. not equal to
      6. greater than
      7. less than
    2. Select the entity, operator using the respective drop-down lists, and type the number in the Value box. For example, PassengerCount(entity) greater than(operator) 5(specified value).

    3. Context: Compare a context object in the dialog with a specific value using one of these operators.

      • exists
      • equals to
      • greater than equals to
      • less than equals to
      • not equal to
      • greater than
      • less than

      For example, Context.entity.PassengerCount(Context object) greater than(operator) 5(specified value).

    4. Intent: Select an intent that matches the next user utterance.

  5. In the Then go to drop-down list, select the next node to execute in the dialog flow if the conditional expression succeeds. For example, if the PassengerCount(entity) is greater than(operator) 5(specified value), Then go to Offers(sub-dialog).

  6. In the Else drop-down list, select the node to execute if the condition fails.

    Note

    If you want to write multiple If conditions, click Add Else If below the last If conditional expression.