Hi,
I noticed that http://search.twitter.com/search?q=Lakers+OR+%23Lakers
is returning a recent retweets count which is neat. I can see this in
the search API, but I can't see where this would be in the normal API.
I'd like to call a specific status and see the retweet count. Is
there a way to
I'm sure I read somewhere that the API limit applies to the account
and not the application? Perhaps someone here can confirm.
In that case, if you have multiple applications registered under the
same account, it might be these other apps that are using the limit.
I once had a similar issue, tur
The time window depends on how busy Twitter is as a whole - the search
is not a fixed timeframe.
On Oct 5, 7:16 am, Quy wrote:
> When try to search on results from a user like "from:mashable", I only
> see results going as far back as 24 hours? I thought the archive went
> back further for a sear
ove to
progress forwards with the feedback we did get from the few people
that filled out the survey before the account got suspended.
The ticket is http://support.twitter.com/tickets/1256917
Thanks!
Tim Bull
--
Twitter developer documentation and resources: http://dev.twitter.com/doc
API
t actions you'll take to avoid this
> in the future?
>
> Thanks!
> Taylor
>
>
>
> On Mon, Oct 4, 2010 at 1:48 PM, Tim Bull wrote:
> > Our application (twitter.com/distlr) has had it's account suspended
> > and I need this reviewed. I (think I) understan
Hi,
We are building an application client that is browser based. We're
very comfortable with using OAuth from our server side code and are
using it fine with the REST API (users sign in, authenticate with
Twitter, we store their access tokens and reuse as requested - at the
moment we mimic the re
Hi,
I'm building a site that integrates with a single Twitter application
from a series of sub domains under the same main domain.
In the past I've only ever used a single domain, so never bothered
with oauth_callback, but I saw it mentioned when I registered the
application and figured it was ex
FYI I see the correct flow is documented here:
http://groups.google.com/group/twitter-api-announce/browse_frm/thread/472500cfe9e7cdb9?hl=en
It's just not in the actual formal doco.
Cheers,
Tim
On Nov 13, 4:29 pm, Tim Bull wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm building a site that integ
I see posts from several months ago, so I thought I ask again
http://groups.google.com/group/twitter-development-talk/browse_thread/thread/134d3bf90a717f8d/806fa7325dd1c6e7?lnk=gst&q=twitter+favorites#806fa7325dd1c6e7
I need to regularly extract and process a users favorites and as noted
in that p
I've successfully implemented a few OAuth implementations with Twitter
now and was setting up a new application. Got to the callback URL
when registering the app and thought "nah, not sure what it will be,
will leave it blank and either enter it later or just pass
oauth_callback anyway". So I sav
There is a required OAuth parameter step which is unclearly documented
by Twitter. When Twitter returns from your /oauth/authorize It returns
an oauth_verifier token. Make sure that you pass this oauth_verifier
token (along with the other parameters) along to
your /oauth/access_token call.
Make s
Use the OOB process - so pass oauth_callback=oob and you should get a
PIN from Twitter which you then use in fetching your access_token.
http://dev.twitter.com/pages/auth_overview#oob
--
Twitter developer documentation and resources: http://dev.twitter.com/doc
API updates via Twitter: http://tw
Oh, and while I think of it - if you just need the access token to make
calls as your app (i.e. it's some kind of bot) then you don't even need
to do that - just go to http://dev.twitter.com/apps, view your app and
select "my access token" on the right. This will give you the access
keys you need w
here, but I'm sure I saw
> last week when we were investigating our own oAuth issues..
>
> But, nonetheless, you are correct, oauth_verifier should be passed
> back every time.
>
> Dave
> Twiends
>
> On Dec 8, 2:27 am, Tim Bull wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
>
&g
We must be about the only developers in the universe that requested
users grant only read access when we first got people to connect
http://trunk.ly to Twitter (I think of the 40 or so apps authorized on
my account, Trunk.ly is the only one that asks for Read only). Never
ask for more access than
n's users don't authorized for read or read/write;
> > > they merely use your application, which you offer as read or
> > > read/write to the world. That is to say, if it's read, your
> > > application can only read its tweets, and if read/write, it can both
>> > keys or tokens.
>
> >> > 2. Your application's users don't authorized for read or read/write;
> >> > they merely use your application, which you offer as read or
> >> > read/write to the world. That is to say, if it's read, your
> &
o re-authorize the application, I do not
> think that this is a bug.
>
> Tom
>
> On 1/31/11 10:45 PM, Tim Bull wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> > While this makes me happy (from a developers point of view), surely
> > this is a bug and therefore not to be relied on?
Have you looked at embed.ly?
You can use the entities to extract the URLs really easily too
http://developer.twitter.com/pages/tweet_entities
Tim
On Mar 20, 10:44 am, Scott Wilcox wrote:
> Hi Adam,
>
> I've not seen anything API side for it (for public use), I think mostly its
> built into the
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