I am partly there in that case then. I already have my application set as a
desktop client. It's just a matter of writing the rest of the code and learning
to use an oAuth library once I find one for TCL.
On 5/7/2010 9:06 AM, Taylor Singletary wrote:
> I'll be updating the documentation on the P
Dossy,
Your oAuth client you wrote in TCL, is it a client using TCL/TK or is it pure
TCL? I do ask because I'm still pretty much a novice TCL coder and am unsure
how I could go about writing something sending and receiving these requests,
and with looking at doing Out-of-band/PIN implementation
I'm having the same issue with my client.
Debug information:
URL: http://api.twitter.com/1/statuses/home_timeline.json
Oauth Token: 6339722-C6ciVM1DS5dsbezoxX25K2DM0LDysexMD0QDm28s
Oauth Token Secret: XRLC2XcJ1gpPd3qyOHR9szIWs1OXMOkY3NljpM36Vo
Consumer Key: CabFljpBvebzTnWpsUtw
Consumer Secret: w
I had always been under the impression that everything had a 140 character
limit.
-Dustin
On 8/29/2010 9:20 PM, Orian Marx (@orian) wrote:
It would appear that today Twitter began enforcing a 140 character
limit on DMs. To my knowledge their was never a limit enforced before,
and even Twitter.
There was plenty of notification on when Basic Auth was going to be
discontinued.
On 9/4/2010 9:29 PM, mikesouthern wrote:
I'm finding it fairly hard to laugh and relax, to be honest.
I'm not a developer. I just use perl scripts to automate my twitter
feeds.
Receiving a notice telling me that
Basic Auth and was struggling
and waiting for someone with more knowledge than I to write a TCL resource I
could use. I also follow @twitterapi on twitter.
On 9/4/2010 10:13 PM, Mike Southern wrote:
On 9/4/10 11:05 PM, Dustin Shea at demonicpa...@gmail.com wrote:
There was plenty of notificati
Yeah, I wrote one in TCL that is non revenue generated as a personal hobby. I
sure hope it don't get banned. I worked hard on it.
On 3/12/2011 9:37 AM, Ellsass wrote:
Another use case: what about semi-private, hobby clients that do not generate revenue? If
my app is forbidden because it's a "c