On Mon, Jul 13, 2009 at 11:24 AM, Mark Davies markdavies12...@gmail.comwrote:
Hi all,
I have a system set up that uses its own twitter to send information
to my main twitter name.
However i have noticed if one message is.
You have a new update
then the message straight after cannot be
Hi Andrew,
Sorry i am fairly new to twitter development and i have looked on the
api doc's but cannot find out how to add a unique sequence ID
would you be able to point me to the place i need to look?
Regards
Mark
On Jul 13, 4:33 pm, Andrew Badera and...@badera.us wrote:
On Mon, Jul 13, 2009
On Mon, Jul 13, 2009 at 10:24 AM, Mark Daviesmarkdavies12...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi all,
I have a system set up that uses its own twitter to send information
to my main twitter name.
However i have noticed if one message is.
You have a new update
then the message straight after cannot be
Hi Damon,
It is strage as if i post a message from twitter.com itself i can for
example post test, then test again straight after. is it a constraint
the API enforces?
Regards
Mark
On Jul 13, 4:46 pm, Damon Clinkscales sca...@pobox.com wrote:
On Mon, Jul 13, 2009 at 10:24 AM, Mark
I think the limit is only on the API. I suppose there are/were
conditions where duplicates would get posted, and this prevents that
from happening.
Easiest thing to do: Have your program put a timestamp in the
message, so instead of You have a new update, put 11:57:01 You have
a new update
Hi Grant,
Yeah a simple yet informative way around the issue, thanks.
Regards
Mark
On Jul 13, 4:57 pm, Grant Emsley grant.ems...@gmail.com wrote:
I think the limit is only on the API. I suppose there are/were
conditions where duplicates would get posted, and this prevents that
from