Hi Burhan,
Tweet# is a .Net twitter client API. It has been developed in a fluent
interface style so you construct your twitter requests in a manner that you
can read from left to right.
For example I use it to search:
var result =
FluentTwitter.CreateRequest().Search().Query().Containing("\"exeter
city\"").Since(last_id).Return(10).Request();
It Reads: Create a Request of type Search using a Query Containing ""exeter
city"" Since the last id returning up to 10 results.
It is on google code http://code.google.com/p/tweetsharp/
Kind Regards,
Paul Kinlan
2009/3/3 Burhan TANWEER <[email protected]>
> Hi Paul,
>
> What is tweet#? Can you let us know more about it?
>
> On Tue, Mar 3, 2009 at 2:28 PM, Paul Kinlan <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> Hi Daniel,
>>
>> I am using tweet# a lot, and it would be good if you catch the 503 error
>> status on the rate limited requests (including the Retry-After header in the
>> response), I have had to implement it in tweet# for our product.
>>
>> Kind Regards,
>> Paul
>>
>> 2009/3/3 Dimebrain <[email protected]>
>>
>>>
>>> I have experienced sending search requests out which return a plain
>>> string, rather than JSON representing a twitter error. It's this:
>>>
>>> "You have been rate limited. Enhance your calm."
>>>
>>> a) What is the rate limiting based on, IP or client? What is the
>>> limit? I develop a Twitter library (tweetsharp) and by default I send
>>> the tweet# credentials along with the call. If this means that anyone
>>> using my library will be rate limited because of that header
>>> information, I need to know so I can force my users to provide their
>>> own credentials so that the library isn't unusable in this area, and
>>>
>>> b) Can we get his as XML, JSON and not a plain string?
>>>
>>>
>>
>
>
> --
> Sincerely,
>
> Burhan Tanweer
> www.explorewww.com
> [email protected]
>
>