hmmm ok, it's the user_id from the User object right? I had the name/
value pairs and every user_id I tried was not found. should I take the
OAuth sig out?

On Aug 12, 3:12 pm, Matt Harris <thematthar...@twitter.com> wrote:
> HTTP requests use key=value pairs in the URL strings and post bodies yes. In
> this case the key is follow and the value is 777925. For multiple accounts
> the value would be 777925,123456.
>
> Using curl this would be sent like this (I use -X POST here because I like
> being verbose with my calls):
>   curl -u usernamehttp://stream.twitter.com/1/statuses/filter.json-d
> "follow=777925,123456" -X POST
>
> Hope that helps,
> Matt
>
>
>
> On Thu, Aug 12, 2010 at 1:04 PM, kme <km.ens...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > I see, so it's not really a key/value pair then, it's the uri-encoded
> > expression as a whole?
>
> > On Aug 11, 9:47 pm, Matt Harris <thematthar...@twitter.com> wrote:
> > > Hey,
>
> > > To follow users you need to POST the user IDs you want to follow as a
> > comma
> > > separated list. For example to follow @themattharris you would POST
> > > "follow=777925"
>
> > > If you're still having problems let us see the API request you are making
> > > and we'll see what's up.
>
> > > Matt
>
> > > On Wed, Aug 11, 2010 at 8:26 PM, kme <km.ens...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > > > I am trying to use the streaming API to return result sets of for
> > > > specific users. For some reason, no user is being located by the id
> > > > specified. Is there something not documented with these calls?
>
> > > >http://dev.twitter.com/pages/streaming_api_methods#follow
>
> > > > any info someone has is greatly appreciated!
>
> > > --
>
> > > Matt Harris
> > > Developer Advocate, Twitterhttp://twitter.com/themattharris
>
> --
>
> Matt Harris
> Developer Advocate, Twitterhttp://twitter.com/themattharris

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