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1 Python Twitter Tools
2 ====================
3
4 The Minimalist Twitter API for Python is a Python API for Twitter,
5 everyone's favorite Web 2.0 Facebook-style status updater for people
6 on the go.
7
8 Also included is a twitter command-line tool for getting your friends'
9 tweets and setting your own tweet from the safety and security of your
10 favorite shell and an IRC bot that can announce Twitter updates to an
11 IRC channel.
12
13 For more information, after installing the `twitter` package:
14
15 * import the `twitter` package and run help() on it
16 * run `twitter -h` for command-line tool help
17
18
19 twitter - The Command-Line Tool
20 -------------------------------
21
22 The command-line tool lets you do some awesome things:
23
24 * view your tweets, recent replies, and tweets in lists
25 * view the public timeline
26 * follow and unfollow (leave) friends
27 * various output formats for tweet information
28
29 The bottom line: type `twitter`, receive tweets.
30
31
32
33 twitterbot - The IRC Bot
34 ------------------------
35
36 The IRC bot is associated with a twitter account (either your own account or an
37 account you create for the bot). The bot announces all tweets from friends
38 it is following. It can be made to follow or leave friends through IRC /msg
39 commands.
40
41
42 twitter-log
43 -----------
44
45 `twitter-log` is a simple command-line tool that dumps all public
46 tweets from a given user in a simple text format. It is useful to get
47 a complete offsite backup of all your tweets. Run `twitter-log` and
48 read the instructions.
49
50 twitter-archiver and twitter-follow
51 -----------------------------------
52
53 twitter-archiver will log all the tweets posted by any user since they
54 started posting. twitter-follow will print a list of all of all the
55 followers of a user (or all the users that user follows).
56
57
58 Programming with the Twitter api classes
59 ========================================
60
61
62 The Twitter and TwitterStream classes are the key to building your own
63 Twitter-enabled applications.
64
65
66 The Twitter class
67 -----------------
68
69 The minimalist yet fully featured Twitter API class.
70
71 Get RESTful data by accessing members of this class. The result
72 is decoded python objects (lists and dicts).
73
74 The Twitter API is documented at:
75
76 http://dev.twitter.com/doc
77
78
79 Examples::
80
81 from twitter import *
82
83 # see "Authentication" section below for tokens and keys
84 t = Twitter(
85 auth=OAuth(OAUTH_TOKEN, OAUTH_SECRET,
86 CONSUMER_KEY, CONSUMER_SECRET)
87 )
88
89 # Get the public timeline
90 t.statuses.public_timeline()
91
92 # Get a particular friend's timeline
93 t.statuses.friends_timeline(id="billybob")
94
95 # Also supported (but totally weird)
96 t.statuses.friends_timeline.billybob()
97
98 # Update your status
99 t.statuses.update(
100 status="Using @sixohsix's sweet Python Twitter Tools.")
101
102 # Send a direct message
103 t.direct_messages.new(
104 user="billybob",
105 text="I think yer swell!")
106
107 # Get the members of tamtar's list "Things That Are Rad"
108 t._("tamtar")._("things-that-are-rad").members()
109
110 # Note how the magic `_` method can be used to insert data
111 # into the middle of a call. You can also use replacement:
112 t.user.list.members(user="tamtar", list="things-that-are-rad")
113
114 # An *optional* `_timeout` parameter can also be used for API
115 # calls which take much more time than normal or twitter stops
116 # responding for some reasone
117 t.users.lookup(screen_name=','.join(A_LIST_OF_100_SCREEN_NAMES), _timeout=1)
118
119
120 Searching Twitter::
121
122 from twitter import *
123
124 twitter_search = Twitter(domain="search.twitter.com")
125
126 # Find the latest search trends
127 twitter_search.trends()
128
129 # Search for the latest News on #gaza
130 twitter_search.search(q="#gaza")
131
132
133 Using the data returned
134 -----------------------
135
136 Twitter API calls return decoded JSON. This is converted into
137 a bunch of Python lists, dicts, ints, and strings. For example::
138
139 x = twitter.statuses.public_timeline()
140
141 # The first 'tweet' in the timeline
142 x[0]
143
144 # The screen name of the user who wrote the first 'tweet'
145 x[0]['user']['screen_name']
146
147
148 Getting raw XML data
149 --------------------
150
151 If you prefer to get your Twitter data in XML format, pass
152 format="xml" to the Twitter object when you instantiate it::
153
154 twitter = Twitter(format="xml")
155
156 The output will not be parsed in any way. It will be a raw string
157 of XML.
158
159
160 The TwitterStream class
161 -----------------------
162
163 The TwitterStream object is an interface to the Twitter Stream API
164 (stream.twitter.com). This can be used pretty much the same as the
165 Twitter class except the result of calling a method will be an
166 iterator that yields objects decoded from the stream. For
167 example::
168
169 twitter_stream = TwitterStream(auth=UserPassAuth('joe', 'joespassword'))
170 iterator = twitter_stream.statuses.sample()
171
172 for tweet in iterator:
173 ...do something with this tweet...
174
175 The iterator will yield tweets forever and ever (until the stream
176 breaks at which point it raises a TwitterHTTPError.)
177
178 The `block` parameter controls if the stream is blocking. Default
179 is blocking (True). When set to False, the iterator will
180 occasionally yield None when there is no available message.
181
182 Twitter Response Objects
183 ------------------------
184
185 Response from a twitter request. Behaves like a list or a string
186 (depending on requested format) but it has a few other interesting
187 attributes.
188
189 `headers` gives you access to the response headers as an
190 httplib.HTTPHeaders instance. You can do
191 `response.headers.getheader('h')` to retrieve a header.
192
193 Authentication
194 --------------
195
196 You can authenticate with Twitter in three ways: NoAuth, OAuth, or
197 UserPassAuth. Get help() on these classes to learn how to use them.
198
199 OAuth is probably the most useful.
200
201
202 Working with OAuth
203 ------------------
204
205 Visit the Twitter developer page and create a new application:
206
207 https://dev.twitter.com/apps/new
208
209 This will get you a CONSUMER_KEY and CONSUMER_SECRET.
210
211 When users run your application they have to authenticate your app
212 with their Twitter account. A few HTTP calls to twitter are required
213 to do this. Please see the twitter.oauth_dance module to see how this
214 is done. If you are making a command-line app, you can use the
215 oauth_dance() function directly.
216
217 Performing the "oauth dance" gets you an ouath token and oauth secret
218 that authenticate the user with Twitter. You should save these for
219 later so that the user doesn't have to do the oauth dance again.
220
221 read_token_file and write_token_file are utility methods to read and
222 write OAuth token and secret key values. The values are stored as
223 strings in the file. Not terribly exciting.
224
225 Finally, you can use the OAuth authenticator to connect to Twitter. In
226 code it all goes like this::
227
228 from twitter import *
229
230 MY_TWITTER_CREDS = os.path.expanduser('~/.my_app_credentials')
231 if not os.path.exists(MY_TWITTER_CREDS):
232 oauth_dance("My App Name", CONSUMER_KEY, CONSUMER_SECRET,
233 MY_TWITTER_CREDS)
234
235 oauth_token, oauth_secret = read_token_file(MY_TWITTER_CREDS)
236
237 twitter = Twitter(auth=OAuth(
238 oauth_token, oauth_secret, CONSUMER_KEY, CONSUMER_SECRET))
239
240 # Now work with Twitter
241 twitter.statuses.update('Hello, world!')
242
243
244
245 License
246 =======
247
248 Python Twitter Tools are released under an MIT License.