Simple module for using Twitter's API in node.js
Installation
npm install node-twitter-api
Usage
Step 1: Initialization
var twitterAPI = require('node-twitter-api');
var twitter = new twitterAPI({
consumerKey: 'your consumer Key',
consumerSecret: 'your consumer secret',
callback: 'http://yoururl.tld/something'
});
Step 2: Getting a request token
twitter.getRequestToken(function(error, requestToken, requestTokenSecret, results){
if (error) {
console.log("Error getting OAuth request token : " + error);
} else {
}
});
If no error has occured, you now have a requestToken
and a requestTokenSecret
. You should store them somewhere (e.g. in a session, if you are using express), because you will need them later to get the current user's access token, which is used for authentification.
Step 3: Getting an Access Token
Redirect the user to https://twitter.com/oauth/authenticate?oauth_token=[requestToken]
. twitter.getAuthUrl(requestToken)
also returns that URL.
If he allows your app to access his data, Twitter will redirect him to your callback-URL (defined in Step 1) containing the get-parameters: oauth_token
and oauth_verifier
. You can use oauth_token
(which is the requestToken
in Step 2) to find the associated requestTokenSecret
. You will need requestToken
, requestTokenSecret
and oauth_verifier
to get an Access Token.
twitter.getAccessToken(requestToken, requestTokenSecret, oauth_verifier, function(error, accessToken, accessTokenSecret, results) {
if (error) {
console.log(error);
} else {
}
});
If no error occured, you now have an accessToken
and an accessTokenSecret
. You need them to authenticate later API-calls.
Step 4: (Optional) Verify Credentials
twitter.verifyCredentials(accessToken, accessTokenSecret, function(error, data, response) {
if (error) {
} else {
console.log(data["screen_name"]);
}
});
Methods
(Allmost) all function names replicate the endpoints of the Twitter API 1.1.
If you want to post a status e. g. - which is done by posting data to statuses/update - you can just do the following:
twitter.statuses("update", {
status: "Hello world!"
},
accessToken,
accessTokenSecret,
function(error, data, response) {
if (error) {
} else {
}
}
);
Most of the functions use the scheme:
twitter.[namespace]([type], [params], [accessToken], [accessTokenSecret], [callback]);
- namespace is the word before the slash (e.g. "statuses", "search", "direct_messages" etc.)
- type is the word after the slash (e.g. "create", "update", "show" etc.)
- params is an object containing the parameters you want to give to twitter (refer to the Twitter API Documentation for more information)
- accessToken and accessTokenSecret are the token and secret of the authenticated user
- callback is a function with the parameters error (either null or an error object), data (data object) and response (unprocessed response from Twitter)
For Timelines you can also use the function getTimeline instead of statuses and use shorter types ("user" instead of "user_timeline").
For Streams you must use getStream which has two instead of just one callback: a dataCallback and an endCallback. (c.f. data and end events of node's http response)
Use of update_with_media
(works similar for update_profile_image)
To send media alongside a tweet you just call the method as specified before. Please note, that you have to specify the parameters slightly different than proposed by the Twitter API documentation:
{
media: [
"path_to_file1",
"path_to_file2",
stream
],
status: "Hello World"
},
Instead of specifing "media[]", you use a real array. The given paths will then be read and posted to the Twitter API. You can also use a Readable Stream (http://nodejs.org/api/fs.html#fs_fs_createreadstream_path_options) instead of a Path.
Please note that Twitter only allows one image at the moment (the last one specified will be used).