>From personal experience the limit is around 150 per hour. That number
has been raised/lowered in the past and yes the error message is
misleading. It is possible that the 150 per hour is just a hard limit
and 1000 per day is a policy limit. Either way if you can technically
post 150 an hour that'
figure out why
they can't connect to api.twitter.com from that machine.
On Mar 25, 11:54 pm, Dushyant wrote:
> I did what you said now I get the following output
> Curl error: couldn't connect to host
> Error: 0
>
> On Mar 25, 7:39 pm, natefanaro wrote:
>
> >
At first glance there are two things you want to change. The $url
should be changed to http://api.twitter.com/1/statuses/update.format
Not sure why you're trying to run that through a proxy on port 80 but
that should be why you're receiving the 404. Remove this line
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_PROXY,
There is no way that Twitter's api is going to let you swap between
two users (ie: here are two usernames that can auth, swap to the other
when one runs out of hits)
You will have to check the authenticating user's rate limit before
each request. When that account hits 0, authenticate with the sec
Twitter went past id 2147483647 a while ago. Whatever you're using to
parse the response has to support an id larger than a 32-bit signed
integer or treat id as a string.
On Mar 17, 1:35 am, brunobar79 wrote:
> I found this problem while i was trying to add and delete some
> favorites to my acocu
You just built an object. If you want to read tweets you have to use a
function that retrieves them.
For example, if you want to search for tweets
my $r = $nt->search("hello world");
print Dumper $r;
It may help if you read the documentation for that module
http://search.cpan.org/dist/Net
and right now the low resistance path
> seems to be scooting into Boston, knocking on the door at Spark Capital, and
> asking for Bijan Sabet. I hope there's an easier method :-)
>
>
>
> On Tue, Nov 10, 2009 at 9:57 AM, natefanaro wrote:
>
> > Looks like that account
Looks like that account is no longer in the search index. You can test
that by searching for from:ProgressivePST
http://search.twitter.com/search?q=from%3AProgressivePST
This probably happened because of the amount of automated tweets
containing links that you have.
On Nov 10, 10:41 am, neal ra
Twitter has a list of libraries that should help
http://apiwiki.twitter.com/Libraries#Perl
Usually when I want to start working with an api in perl I check cpan
our first
http://search.cpan.org/search?query=twitter&mode=all
Most libraries in cpan will have some example code to get you going.
On
There are a few status updates on @cltag that are fairly similar. If
you're posting the same tweet multiple times twitter will only accept
the first tweet and ignore the rest. To test this add a timestamp at
the end of each tweet like this "status=$mensaje".time() and try
again.
Instead of checki
There is no officially supported way to get a static url for profile
images but if you're familiar with google app engine you may want to
check this out: http://code.google.com/p/spiurl/
On Aug 18, 1:34 pm, Adriano Nagel wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Is there a permanent URL to user profile images? Currently
Nope, it's not a cache issue. I cleared the cache between refreshes
and same result.
Again this only happens after a default theme is selected and then I
try to change colors via the API. If I manually change any color via
twitter.com, then update colors (different colors) via the API, the
new ch
When I select a theme for my design (on the site), then update any
color (background, text, link, etc) via the api no changes occur to my
account. If I change any color manually via the site, then update
colors via the api it works like it should. The strange thing about
this is when accessing htt
If you're getting a 200 back I believe your request sent to twitter is
correct. Go to Settings -> Design -> Change background image. You
should see your uploaded image. Twitter is not showing custom
background images updated through their api if a theme is selected.
Unfortunately the only way to d
14 matches
Mail list logo