
Download Slackord2. Before you can turn it on, though, you’ll need to set up a Discord bot — here’s a link to get started.click new application, name it whatever you want.Next, click url generator down button OAuth2 in the left sidebar.Click under Scope robot. this Robot permissions After doing this the field will be displayed; click the administration staff There.Next, scroll down and copy Generated URL At the bottom of the screen – you’ll need this later.
now go to robot section in the sidebar.Give the bot a custom username and icon if you like, then make sure public robot and Requires OAuth2 code authorization are both turned off, and the Message Content Intent is turned on.You will be asked if you want to save the changes – click the save. Now scroll to the top of the page and click reset token button. Copy token.
Finally, go to the URL you copied earlier. You’ll be asked which Discord server you want to add the bot to – choose the server you intend to migrate your Slack posts to.
Migrating your Slack archives
Slackord by Justin Pot
Now you can open Slackord2 on your computer. You will be asked for a bot token – paste it. If all is well, you should be told “Bot connection is now enabled”, but please do not connect.
Instead click File > Import JSON Folder. Browse to the Slack archive you downloaded earlier, and open the folder for the channel you want to migrate. The parsing process may take a while, depending on the size of the archive. If all is well, you should see old messages scrolling before your eyes. While it’s resolving, head to Discord and create a new text channel with the same name.
Once the parsing is complete on Slackord, click the Settings > Robot Connection > Connection. This will connect – you can tell that the bot you created is working if it appears online in Discord. Now you can type “/lazy” In the Discord channel you want to import the channel profile into. If everything is set up correctly, messages will slowly start to show up.
Repeat this process for each channel you want to migrate – create a blank channel, open the JSON folder, and run /slackord. Of course, it took a while, and the results weren’t perfect. The posts are all in plain text, and you won’t see the avatars next to them. Still, it’s a searchable archive of all your old Slack posts. Now you just need to let your friends know it’s time to switch.