Sample code for early access of the Twitter v2 endpoints. Each endpoint has a folder where you can find sample code (Python, Java, Ruby, Node.js, and in some cases, R).
- Website: https://developer.twitter.com/en/docs/twitter-api/early-access
- Getting started: https://developer.twitter.com/en/docs/twitter-api/getting-started
In order to run the code samples in this repository you will need to create environment variables. You can find your credentials and bearer token in the App inside of your Project in the dashboard of the developer portal.
For OAuth 1.0a samples, you will need to export your consumer key and secret in your terminal. Be sure to replace <your_consumer_key>
and <your_consumer_secret>
with your own credentials without the < >
.
export CONSUMER_KEY='<your_consumer_key>'
export CONSUMER_SECRET='<your_consumer_secret>'
For samples which use bearer token authentication, you will need to export the bearer token. Be sure to replace <your_bearer_token>
with your own bearer token without the < >
.
export BEARER_TOKEN='<your_bearer_token>'
You will need to have Python 3 installed to run this code. The Python samples use requests==2.24.0
which uses requests-oauthlib==1.3.0
.
You can install these packages as follows:
pip install requests
pip install requests-oauthlib
You will need to have Ruby (recommended: >= 2.0.0) installed in order to run the code. The Ruby examples use typheous
as the HTTP client, which needs to be gem installed. For OAuth with user context requests, you'll also need to install the oauth
gem (see below).
gem install typheous
gem install oauth
You will need to have Node.js installed to run this code. All Node.js examples use needle
as the HTTP client, which needs to be npm installed. For OAuth with user context requests, you'll need to install the got
and oauth-1.0a
packages.
npm install needle
npm install got
npm install oauth-1.0a
If you use Homebrew, you can install a Java runtime using:
brew cask install java
- Twitter Developer account: if you don’t have one already, you can apply for one.
- A Project and an App created in the dashboard.
-
For general questions related to the API and features, please use the v2 section of our developer community forums.
-
If there's an bug or issue with the sample code itself, please create a new issue here on GitHub.
-
If you have questions about the future, check out these resources:
- Guide to the Future of the Twitter API
- Twitter API Roadmap
- Twitter Developer Feedback, where you can post and vote on ideas and feature requests
We welcome pull requests that add meaningful additions to these code samples, particularly for languages that are not yet represented here.
We feel that a welcoming community is important and we ask that you follow Twitter's Open Source Code of Conduct in all interactions with the community.
Copyright 2020 Twitter, Inc.
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0: https://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0