I'm looking at this snippet for Python:
http://dev.twitter.com/pages/oauth_single_token#python
and there are the key and secret parameters for oauth.Token. But the
page does not go into what those two are suppose to be. I tried using
oauth token and secret, as well as the username and password fo
sumer(key=CONSUMER_KEY, secret=CONSUMER_SECRET)"
>
> > The users oauth token and secret replace "'abcdefg', 'hijklmnop'"
>
> > Abraham
>
> > On Mon, May 10, 2010 at 13:24, Glenn wrote:
>
> >> I'm looking at this snippet f
Is there a reference that explains the field types and constraints of
the data coming from the Twitter API?
Some things are a bit uncertain. For example, are user IDs 32bit or 64
bit integers?
Thanks in advance.
I use ruby, the twitter-text library, yajl for json processing, and
mongodb for storage.
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Glenn
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cious developer.
I'd sleep much easier at night if I didn't know anybody else's
password, I'm sure the Twitter team would prefer if only a user knew
their own password too.
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ely non-spammy user"
threshold that you define?
I'll see if I can whip up a prototype over the weekend (unless someone
beats me to it).
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he instances where I don't do that (like I don't want
to taint my OSX install with PHP dependencies or I'm using ASP.Net)
then I'll setup a virtual machine on my laptop that is nearly
identical to my production server.
It's usually quite easy to do and can save a lot
thorizes the Twitter application via
> @anywhere a server side library with the same apikey and secretkey is
> authorized).
I doubt you'll have access to the credentials, as that would mean
you'd
have login credentials for any twitter user that hit your page which
wouldn't
be what
uccessfully
window.location.href = "/twitter/twitterlogin.jsp?
twitterid="+user.id;
}
Is that any better?
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Glenn
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work is to iterate over the whole set and store what you're
missing, or beg and plead for the API team to store a favorited_at
datetime that you can order by.
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Glenn
http://glenngillen.com/
Great change Mark (and team).
Thanks,
--
Glenn Gillen
http://glenngillen.com/
to be already available and in widespread use.
- Did you have a question to ask?
--
Glenn Gillen
http://glenngillen.com/
lem it's almost always mine to deal with. The great thing about
services like rpm.newrelic and hoptoad is that they give you
actionable information, and while I think this would be an interesting
technical challenge I wonder if it's actually providing users anything
actionable.
Thoughts?
--
Glenn Gillen
http://glenngillen.com/
> posting to my twitter feed.
The single token approach can avoid the need for callbacks, so long as
you don't need to tweet to other users accounts.
--
Glenn Gillen
http://glenngillen.com/
sfy their sadomasochistic desires to trawl through network dumps,
it's to make their life easier while trying to identify/recreate and
fix your problem.
--
Glenn Gillen
http://glenngillen.com/
straints you have to work within, we might be lucky enough to have
someone in this group that can think of a solution.
--
Glenn Gillen
http://glenngillen.com/
rrently handle that
example, I would have expected the url to be "http://dev.twitter.com/
#hot" and for the tweet to contain no hashtag. If the hashtag always
takes precedence I'd have no way to link to the following without
using a URL shortener: http://oauth.net/core/1.0a/#anchor41
--
Glenn Gillen
http://glenngillen.com/
On May 13, 11:11 pm, Raffi Krikorian wrote:
> hey glenn.
>
> i think something went wrong in the copy and paste -- there should have been
> a space between the URL and the hashtag.
My bad. Back in my box then.
Cheers,
--
Glenn Gillen
http://glenngillen.com/
ything else that arises.
Just a thought,
--
Glenn Gillen
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This issue becomes even more pronounced
when lesser known individuals are the source of the original tweet,
and when the topic being retweeted becomes more niche.
Or have I completely misunderstood the final implementation/
implications?
Thanks,
Glenn
I get the 500 Internal Server Error when I try to update a profile
image. I am trying to do it using c# and I am not sure what is going
on. Here is a network sniff of my request:
No. TimeSourceDestination
Protocol Info
657 2.77551410.50.50.230 128.121.1
I had asked a related question prior but never received a response:
Is there an API that returns ONLY mentions that are in reply to a specific
tweet?
Thanks.
Glenn
On Aug 10, 2011, at 9:46 AM, nidhi wrote:
> Hi,
>
> How can I find total mentions for the account.
> Right now API
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