NAME AnyEvent::Twitter - Implementation of the Twitter API for AnyEvent VERSION Version 0.26 SYNOPSIS use AnyEvent::Twitter; my $twitty = AnyEvent::Twitter->new ( username => 'elm3x', password => 'secret123' ); $twitty->reg_cb ( error => sub { my ($twitty, $error) = @_; warn "Error: $error\n"; }, statuses_friends => sub { my ($twitty, @statuses) = @_; for (@statuses) { my ($pp_status, $raw_status) = @$_; printf "new friend status: %s: %s\n", $pp_status->{screen_name}, $pp_status->{text}; } }, ); $twitty->receive_statuses_friends; $twitty->update_status ("I'm bathing in my hot tub!", sub { my ($twitty, $status, $js_status, $error) = @_; if (defined $error) { # ... } else { # ... } }); $twitty->start; # important! DESCRIPTION This is a lightweight implementation of the Twitter API. It's currently still very limited and only implements the most necessary parts of the API (for inclusion in my chat client). If you are missing something don't hesitate to bug me! This module uses AnyEvent::HTTP for communicating with twitter. It currently doesn't use OAuth based authentication but HTTP Basic Authentication, as it is still not deprecated at the time of this writing (July 2009). If it will ever be deprecated I will take care to implement OAuth. The AnyEvent::Twitter class inherits the event callback interface from Object::Event. WEIGHTS AND RATE LIMITING As the Twitter API is heavily rate limited in that kind of way that you only have a few GET requests per hour (~150), this module implements rate limiting. It will dynamically adjust the poll intervals (if you didn't set a fixed poll intervall) to not exceed the requests per hours. The "bandwidth" parameter to the "new" method (see below) controls how much of the available requests are used. This is useful if you want to run multiple clients for one twitter account and not have them take away each others request per hours. The $weigth parameters to the "receive_..." methods is for prioritizing the requests. It works as follows: Each time a request can be made every "receive_..." 'job' gets his weight added to an internal counter. The 'job' with the highest count will be executed. With this simple weight system you can say which kind of information you are most interested in. For example giving the statuses of your friends a $weight of 2 and the mentions of your nickname a $weight of 1 will result in polling the statuses of your friends two times more often. LOCAL TIME NOTE: It's crucial that your system clock is correctly set. As twitter only reports an absolute time at which the rate limiting is reseted we have to calculate the next poll time based on your clock. METHODS my $obj = AnyEvent::Twitter->new (%args) Creates a new twitter client object. %args can contain these arguments ("username" and "password" are mandatory): username => $username Your twitter username. password => $password Your twitter password. state => $new_state_struct Initializer for the value given to the "state" method (see below). bandwidth => $bandwidth_factor $bandwidth_factor is the amount of "bandwidth" that is consumed by the regular polling. The default value is 0.95. Any value between 0 and 1 is valid. If you give a value of 0.5 this AnyEvent::Twitter instance will only use up half of the available requests per hours for the polls. $obj->start This method will start requesting the data you are interested in. See also the "receive_..." methods, about how to say what you are interested in. $obj->receive_statuses_friends ([$weight]) This will enable polling for the statuses of your friends. About $weight see the "WEIGHTS AND RATE LIMITING" section. Whenever a new status is received the "statuses_friends" event is emitted (see below). The "id" of the seen statuses are recorded in a data structure which you may set or retrieve via the "state" method. I recommend caching the state data structure. $obj->receive_statuses_mentions ([$weight]) This will enable polling for the statuses that mention you. About $weight see the "WEIGHTS AND RATE LIMITING" section. Whenever a new status is received the "statuses_mentions" event is emitted (see below). The "id" of the seen statuses are recorded in a data structure which you may set or retrieve via the "state" method. I recommend caching the state data structure. $obj->check_status_length ($status) This method checks whether the string in $status does not exceed the maximum length of a status update. If the length is ok a true value is returned. If not, a false value is returned. $obj->update_status ($status, $done_cb->($obj, $status, $js, $error)) This will post an update of your status to twitter. $status should not be longer than 140 octets, you can check this with the "check_status_length" method (see above). When the request is done the $done_cb callback will be called with the $status as second argument if the update was successful and a human readable $error string as fourth argument in case of an error. $js is the JSON response received from the server. When the HTTP POST was successful the "status_updated" event will be emitted. my $state_struct = $obj->state $obj->state ($new_state_struct) With these methods you can set the internal sequence state. Whenever a special kind of data is retrieved from Twitter the most recent sequence id of the entry is remembered in the hash $state_struct. You can use this method to store the state or restore it. This is useful if you have an application that shouldn't forget which entries it already saw. EVENTS statuses_ => @statuses This event is emitted whenever a new status was seen for the "statuspath" which can be one of these: friends public (currently unimplemented) user (currently unimplemented) mentions @statuses contains the new status updates. The order is usually that the newest statuses come first. Each element of @statuses is an array reference containing: $status, $raw_status $status is a hash reference containing some post processed information about the status update in $raw_status. Most notable is the unescaping of the texts (see below about $raw_status). It contains these key/value pairs: text => $text This is the text of the status update. screen_name => $screen_name This contains the screen name of the user who posted this status update. timestamp => $timestamp This contains the creation time of the status as unix timestamp in UTC time. $raw_status is the parsed JSON structure of the new status. About the interesting fields please consult . Please note that '<' and '>' are encoded as HTML entities '<' and '>', so you will have to decode them yourself. next_request_in => $seconds, $remaining_request, $remaining_time This event is emitted when the timer for the next request is started. $seconds are the seconds until the next request is made. $remaining_request are the requests you have available within the next $remaining_time seconds. error => $error_string Whenever an error happens this event is emitted. $error_string contains a human readable error message. AUTHOR Robin Redeker, "" ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Nuno Nunes (nfmnunes @ CPAN) - For initial patch for mentions. SEE ALSO Object::Event BUGS Please report any bugs or feature requests to "bug-anyevent-twitter at rt.cpan.org", or through the web interface at . I will be notified and then you'll automatically be notified of progress on your bug as I make changes. SUPPORT You can find documentation for this module with the perldoc command. perldoc AnyEvent::Twitter You can also look for information at: * IRC: AnyEvent::Twitter IRC Channel See the same channel as the AnyEvent::XMPP module: IRC Network: http://freenode.net/ Server : chat.freenode.net Channel : #ae_xmpp Feel free to join and ask questions! * Homepage: * AnnoCPAN: Annotated CPAN documentation * CPAN Ratings * RT: CPAN's request tracker * Search CPAN COPYRIGHT & LICENSE Copyright 2009 Robin Redeker, all rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.