er, off. Also:
$twitterObj = new EpiTwitter($consumer_key, $consumer_secret); You are only providing consumer keys, you need to provider user keys too (probably the ones under 'My Access Token'). Scott. On 3 Oct 2010, at 08:01, plw wrote: > At the top of my page I have > > include 'lib/EpiCurl.php'; > include 'lib/EpiOAuth.php'; > include 'lib/EpiTwitter.php'; > include 'lib/secret.php'; > > further down I have > > $twitter_message = "Offers update - " . date("g:i a:") . " > http://www.pub-rooms.co.uk/ask-rooms.php?bookrooms=" . $intid . " - > " . $ItemName . " " . $CTown; > $twitterObj = new EpiTwitter($consumer_key, $consumer_secret); > > $twitterObj->setToken($oauth_token, $oauth_token_secret); > $update_status = $twitterObj->post_statusesUpdate(array('status' => > $twitter_message)); > > > > My problem that it doesn't send anything to twitter and it doesn't > like > > $tmp=$update_status->response; > > php errors are turned off so I don't know why it doesn't like > > $tmp=$update_status->response; > > What am I doing wrong. At the moment I am totaly stuck. Am I right in > thinking that you can't send a message directly to twiiter anymore > from the admin of a website now that you have to use OAUTH? -- Twitter developer documentation and resources: http://dev.twitter.com/doc API updates via Twitter: http://twitter.com/twitterapi Issues/Enhancements Tracker: http://code.google.com/p/twitter-api/issues/list Change your membership to this group: http://groups.google.com/group/twitter-development-talk