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A tweet says a thousand yeps...
Atsaty acts like yes
, but instead of always outputting yeps,
it uses sentiment analysis to
find the current mood of English-speaking tweeters on Twitter.
If there are more positive tweeters than negative, it outputs yep, otherwise
it outputs nope.
$ atsaty
y
y
y
...
var atsaty = require("atsaty");
atsaty(function(err, yep) {
if(yep) console.log("Everyone on Twitter seems to be happy");
else console.log("Tweeters are crying at the moment");
});
atsaty("from:z0w0", function(err, yep) {
if(yep) console.log("The creator of this pointless thing is happy");
else console.log("The creator is sad, T__T");
});
npm install -g atsaty
atsaty --help
Usage: atsaty [options]
Options:
-h, --help output usage information
-V, --version output the version number
-y, --yep <msg> Message to output for yep
-n, --nope <msg> Message to output for nope
$ atsaty
y
y
y
...
$ atsaty from:z0w0
n
n
n
...
Uses the Twitter Search API and sentiment analysis to figure out how Twitter is currently feeling.
If query
is provided, then it will check the mood of a specific search
query instead of the entire Twitter community (e.g. "#racist #cats").
The callback will be called with an error or null
as its first argument,
false
as its second if there are no positive tweets or there
are more negative tweets than positive ones, otherwise it calls with a second
argument of true
.
The project is MIT licensed. See LICENSE
for more details.
FAQs
A tweet says a thousand yeps
The npm package atsaty receives a total of 0 weekly downloads. As such, atsaty popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that atsaty demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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