On 2/15/2010 4:14 PM, Dewald Pretorius wrote:
Oh for crying out loud, is everyone now going to stare themselves
blind at the phrase Gestapo-like and forget about the issue at hand?
It is meant to portray a one-sided action where the accused party is
not afforded a voice, or his/her objections,
C'mon, FFS, you know what I mean.
Nobody has called anybody a Nazi, okay?
I'm sorry Dewald, but when I think Gestapo, knitting circle is not the
first thing that comes to mind. Nazi is. Yes Twitter needs to be a
little more clear in their communication (ironic?) with developers and
Perhaps some kind of status indication such as green/amber/red lights?
Scott.
On 17 Feb 2010, at 06:54, Tim Haines wrote:
Hey Raffi,
It would probably be helpful for a lot of us if the status blog (or another
secondary indicator) was more accurate in terms of being a problem/no
problem
Just wondering, is it a bad practive for a web-based app to store
user's token and secret in cookies?
This would of cause simplify and speed up the login, but is it a
security risk?
On 2/17/2010 5:32 AM, Dmitri Snytkine wrote:
Just wondering, is it a bad practive for a web-based app to store
user's token and secret in cookies?
This would of cause simplify and speed up the login, but is it a
security risk?
When you boil it down, everything done to increase accessibility
It would be awesome to have a status API – isolated from the actual API –
that applications can ping and use to display helpful information to users.
(Or even just a very simple page that you could load in – even in a mobile
app – to display the current status of Twitter when something goes wrong
Hi I would like to create a twitter application which retrieves
information from a website and puts them on twitter. The idea is
having a forum on the website where people can post their own comments
and even reply to a posted comment. The forum must be updated both on
twitter and the website
Speaking of rate limiting, I was trying to learn the Twitter API and
Net::Twitter by making six degrees of twitter that would figure out
how many hops it was from Account A to Account B when I ran up against
limiting.
The way I had thought of doing it was basically the list of whom a
person
Hi,
What is the expected wait time after submitting a request for xAuth
access?
I'm trying to let a client know how long the development cycle will
take, but a lot depends on this approval. My request is currently
pending from Thursday or Friday of last week.
Thank you.
When sending a status update through the API how should quotes be
formatted?
I am using $status = htmlspecialchars($status, ENT_QUOTES, 'UTF-8');
in php with no luck, single and double quotes show up on twitter
escaped with a backslash.
Thanks.
we're in the process of putting the last pieces of infrastructure in place
-- once that is in place, then the turnaround time on requests will be
fairly quick. right now, all requests are being logged, and will be
responded to.
On Wed, Feb 17, 2010 at 7:23 AM, Shannon Whitley
this feature has definitely been in our head - the obvious problem, of
course, is if the API is having issues, and you host a status API in the
same place
On Wed, Feb 17, 2010 at 6:45 AM, Aral Balkan aralbal...@gmail.com wrote:
It would be awesome to have a status API – isolated from the
Tim,
We are working on this for our forthcoming developer site. Mark should
be posting to the list in the coming days to get feedback from
everyone on what they would like to see.
We know it's needed and look forward to finally having something in place.
Best, Ryan
On Wed, Feb 17, 2010 at 6:54
Hi folks,
I wouldn't usually post something of this nature but I think you'll agree its
worth reading. I give you quite possibly the best tweet I've ever seen:
http://twitter.com/lancearmstrong/status/9045920131
Scott.
smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME cryptographic signature
On 2/17/2010 12:09 PM, Scott Wilcox wrote:
Hi folks,
I wouldn't usually post something of this nature but I think you'll agree its
worth reading. I give you quite possibly the best tweet I've ever seen:
http://twitter.com/lancearmstrong/status/9045920131
Scott.
Good, although Tila
I'll be sure to check them out!
On 17 Feb 2010, at 19:21, John Meyer wrote:
On 2/17/2010 12:09 PM, Scott Wilcox wrote:
Hi folks,
I wouldn't usually post something of this nature but I think you'll agree
its worth reading. I give you quite possibly the best tweet I've ever seen:
hi all.
one of the complaints we hear about a lot is that
statuses/updatehttp://apiwiki.twitter.com/Twitter-REST-API-Method:-statuses
updatesilently rejects tweets that are greater than 140 characters
(as well as
silently dropping duplicate tweets, and silently dropping malformed geotags)
-- we
Followers are ordered by based on when they followed you. The most
recent followers will be at the top of your followers list.
Abraham
On Wed, Feb 17, 2010 at 05:05, kiran kumar kiran.nets...@gmail.com wrote:
Hai Every One,
How do i findout new followers from my followers list..Plz help
I'm using the stream API to track tweets by keyword (filter).
According to the documentation, Streams may also contain status
deletion notices. Clients are urged to honor deletion requests and
discard deleted statuses immediately.
When I try creating and deleting tweets. I always get the new
hi all.
one of the complaints we hear about a lot is that
statuses/updatehttp://apiwiki.twitter.com/Twitter-REST-API-Method:-statuses
updatesilently rejects tweets that are greater than 140 characters
(as well as
silently dropping duplicate tweets, and silently dropping malformed geotags)
Hey guys,
I'm writing a client in java and trying to use oauth to get an access
token. However, I keep getting an IOException which essentially means
I'm getting an HTTP 401 error back (unauthorized). I've verified that
my signature algorithm is correct by using some provided examples over
at
Hello,
At tweekly.fm we probably have around 1000-2000 accounts where users haven't
removed their accounts and have just removed permission for the app to run.
Once our weekly processes run, they return the expected 'Could not authenticate
you' errors.
Whats going to be the best way to run
as far as we know, we are handing 140 characters properly -- please refer
to http://apiwiki.twitter.com/FAQ#HowdoInbspcountoutnbsp140charactersnbsp.
that's our methodology for counting characters, and if you think that's
wrong, or if we're not implementing it properly, please let us know.
On
In this case, we don't have the original status text to match, so we can't
forward the deletion message to you. In the follow case, I'm pretty sure
that we do send the deletion message, but there are issues with retweet,
etc. etc. So, it varies on fractional streams. Best effort all around.
-John
Why are you doing this?
StringBuilder params = new StringBuilder();
params.append(encode(oauth_consumer_key));
params.append(=\);
params.append(encode(CONSUMER_KEY));
params.append(\, );
Can you post the URL with querystring parameters when you make the request?
Ryan
On Wed, Feb 17, 2010 at 4:51 PM, Ryan Alford ryanalford...@gmail.comwrote:
Why are you doing this?
StringBuilder params = new StringBuilder();
params.append(encode(oauth_consumer_key));
Why not simply delete the user from your db as part of your weekly
process when you get the Could Not Authentica You error in the first
place?
On Feb 17, 2010, at 12:11 PM, Scott Wilcox sc...@tig.gr wrote:
Hello,
At tweekly.fm we probably have around 1000-2000 accounts where users
I would image that implementing S3 versioning would be pretty easy and would
rid your systems of a whole bunch of complexity.
http://groups.google.com/group/twitter-development-talk/browse_thread/thread/4faeb3b66ae2e504/
Abraham
On Tue, Feb 16, 2010 at 12:51, Raffi Krikorian ra...@twitter.com
Seems like you should be able to replicate all of the retweet functionality
on twitter.com but it will probably take a lot of API calls.
Abraham
On Tue, Feb 16, 2010 at 12:29, srikanth reddy srikanth.yara...@gmail.comwrote:
Hi
Has anybody implemented complete Retweet functionality (retweets
To answer the first email, I was doing that so I could put it in the
request header's authorization field to get this effect:
(Taken from oauth.net)
Authorization: OAuth realm=http://sp.example.com/;,
oauth_consumer_key=0685bd9184jfhq22,
I keep getting this result for statuses/retweet, I even hard coded the
the status ID to be sure it was valid:
stdClass Object ( [request] = /1/statuses/retweet.json [error] = Not
found ) 1
Here is the php I am using (yes it is a good status id):
$connection = new TwitterOAuth(CONSUMER_KEY,
Thats brilliant, I've been wanting this for a long time now.
On 17 Feb 2010, at 19:48, Raffi Krikorian wrote:
hi all.
one of the complaints we hear about a lot is that statuses/update silently
rejects tweets that are greater than 140 characters (as well as silently
dropping duplicate
Your querystring parameters are in the wrong order. You have the
oauth_nonce AFTER oauth_timestamp. It needs to be before it. The
parameters must be in order.
Ryan
Sent from my DROID
On Feb 17, 2010 6:18 PM, Berto mstbe...@gmail.com wrote:
To answer the first email, I was doing that so I
http://apiwiki.twitter.com/Twitter-REST-API-Method%3A-favorites
doesn't mention any limits to the page parameter.
Through trial and error I figured out that
curl --location --referer ;auto -D - -s --netrc
'http://twitter.com/favorites.xml?page=175'
was too much but
curl --location --referer
So Raffi. Can you help us out with an example of how we should be
handling the callback URL? I've done quite a bit of searching, but am
not seeing that it is documented very well or finding any samples.
Thanks.
On Feb 16, 5:45 pm, mthistle mthis...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi DenVog,
First, cool, you
Try $result = $connection-post('statuses/retweet/'9212486431');
Twitter might not recognize
http://api.twitter.com/1/statuses/retweet.json?id=status_id
Let me know how it goes.
Abraham
On Wed, Feb 17, 2010 at 14:13, Fred Garvin i...@windpath.com wrote:
I keep getting this result for
Hello!
I am just starting developing my app. I got the oAuth thing to work
using pecl oauth, which is great and was easy.
Now the question: What should I do after user is logged via oAuth, and
after I got array of user data from this url:
https://twitter.com/account/verify_credentials.json
I
Nevermind, just re-read the normalizing parameters part of the spec.
I'll try it out tomorrow.
Thanks.
On Feb 17, 5:27 pm, Ryan Alford ryanalford...@gmail.com wrote:
Your querystring parameters are in the wrong order. You have the
oauth_nonce AFTER oauth_timestamp. It needs to be before it.
Done! It's at http://code.google.com/p/twitter-api/issues/detail?id=1459
Thanks again for the great service :)
Dan
On Mon, Feb 15, 2010 at 5:24 PM, Raffi Krikorian ra...@twitter.com wrote:
i don't think there is a way to do this currently.
could i ask a favor and ask you to note this feature
I thought that was only for the signature which is in the right
order?
Ryan Alford wrote:
Your querystring parameters are in the wrong order. You have the
oauth_nonce AFTER oauth_timestamp. It needs to be before it. The
parameters must be in order.
Ryan
Sent from my DROID
On Feb 17,
as far as we know, we are handing 140 characters properly -- please refer
to http://apiwiki.twitter.com/FAQ#HowdoInbspcountoutnbsp140charactersnbsp.
that's our methodology for counting characters, and if you think that's
wrong, or if we're not implementing it properly, please let us know.
Hi -
I'm trying to figure out how much history search.twitter.com gives
access to. For instance, this search query:
http://search.twitter.com/search.json?q=barack+obamasince=2008-11-03until=2008-11-05
Which bounds election day 2008, returns no results. . Other variants
on the query, such as
Account/verify_credentials does not actually count against your rate limit
so you can call that each time a user signs in.
In general you should cache any data that takes a long time to poll from the
API or anything that does not change often.
Abraham
On Wed, Feb 17, 2010 at 17:52, Dmitri
Hi
You determine the number of tweets per age using the 'rpp' query
parameter, with a maximum of I believe, 100 tweets per page, but is
there also a way to determine the total number of 'matches' for a
given search query?
Hi mark
Good question and I haven't been able to get a definitive answer.
Originally I thought it should be possible to search back to twitter's
birth. Recent tests with the Search API though I haven't been able to
go back further than 1 week from today's date. If you DO find an
answer, would
http://apiwiki.twitter.com/Things-Every-Developer-Should-Know#6Therearepaginationlimits
Abraham
On Wed, Feb 17, 2010 at 19:26, eco_bach bac...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi mark
Good question and I haven't been able to get a definitive answer.
Originally I thought it should be possible to search back
Nope. You can iterate and count them yourselves but you will be limited to
the results Search returns.
Abraham
On Wed, Feb 17, 2010 at 19:12, eco_bach bac...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi
You determine the number of tweets per age using the 'rpp' query
parameter, with a maximum of I believe, 100
Hi
In building a twitter search application I was surprised to find out
that there is a inconsistency in User Icon actual pixel sizes.
Is there any reason for this?
Why can't Twitter automatically resize image icons if they are too
large?
And better yet, convert the occasional .bmp format into
You order all parameters EXCEPT the signature, then create the signature,
then append the signature to the end. All other parameters should be in
order.
Ryan
On Wed, Feb 17, 2010 at 6:42 PM, Berto mstbe...@gmail.com wrote:
I thought that was only for the signature which is in the right
Abraham, thanks for the pointer.
From the wiki, it appears that the search should return up to 1500
results; if you don't restrict the limit by specifying rpp and page,
then it might error out.
Thus this should yield good results:
50 matches
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