Jump to content

Search the Community

Showing results for tags 'twitteroauth'.

  • Search By Tags

    Type tags separated by commas.
  • Search By Author

Content Type


Forums

  • Welcome to ProcessWire
    • News & Announcements
    • Showcase
    • Wishlist & Roadmap
  • Community Support
    • Getting Started
    • Tutorials
    • FAQs
    • General Support
    • API & Templates
    • Modules/Plugins
    • Themes and Profiles
    • Multi-Language Support
    • Security
    • Jobs
  • Off Topic
    • Pub
    • Dev Talk

Product Groups

  • Form Builder
  • ProFields
  • ProCache
  • ProMailer
  • Login Register Pro
  • ProDrafts
  • ListerPro
  • ProDevTools
  • Likes
  • Custom Development

Find results in...

Find results that contain...


Date Created

  • Start

    End


Last Updated

  • Start

    End


Filter by number of...

Joined

  • Start

    End


Group


AIM


MSN


Website URL


ICQ


Yahoo


Jabber


Skype


Location


Interests

Found 1 result

  1. Hello There Fellow PW lovers. I wanted to share this code that i created to post tweets to the Twitter API in an upcomming project i am working on. And i Thought that everyone could have some use for it. I am using Composer to load the TwitterOAuth PHP library for working with the Twitter API in this code example. Also you need to create an App and have your own API keys ready, you can do that here: https://developer.twitter.com/en/apps The code posts a string and uploads media to be used with the tweet. For the TwitterOAuth methods information see the link above. Note: The paths to the media needs to be local for TwitterOAuth to pick them up and upload them. See this link for filesize limits and other info on media attachements. https://developer.twitter.com/en/docs/media/upload-media/overview <?PHP /* TwitterOAuth API via Composer https://twitteroauth.com/ */ include('vendor/autoload.php'); /* define the classes */ use Abraham\TwitterOAuth\TwitterOAuth; function postTweetUpdate($str = '', $mediaArray = null) { /* Twitter OAuth keys Create your App and find your API keys here: https://developer.twitter.com/en/apps */ $consumer_key = ''; $consumer_secret = ''; $access_token = ''; $access_token_secret = ''; /* init API */ $connection = new TwitterOAuth($consumer_key, $consumer_secret, $access_token, $access_token_secret); if(is_array($mediaArray)) { $mediaIDS = array(); /* Up to 4 media objects can be uploaded. https://developer.twitter.com/en/docs/media/upload-media/overview */ foreach($mediaArray AS $key => $media_path) { /* Upload media to twitter API and get media ID back */ $mediaOBJ = $connection->upload('media/upload', ['media' => $media_path]); /* push uploaded media ID to array */ array_push($mediaIDS, $mediaOBJ->media_id_string); } /* create comma delimited list of media ID:s */ $mediaIDstr = implode(',', $mediaIDS); } /* API params */ $arrayCfg['status'] = $str; $arrayCfg['media_ids'] = $mediaIDstr; /* Make POST request to Twitter API https://developer.twitter.com/en/docs/tweets/post-and-engage/api-reference/post-statuses-update */ $statuses = $connection->post("statuses/update", $arrayCfg); /* return payload */ return $statuses; } ?> <?PHP /* string to Post */ $str = 'Test Tweet... ' . PHP_EOL; $str .= '#mytweet' . PHP_EOL; $str .= 'http://www.mywebsite.com' . PHP_EOL; $str .= '' . hash('sha1', mt_rand(0, 1000000)); /* media to upload */ $mediaToUpload[] = 'images/my_image.jpg'; /* make request to Twitter API */ $payLoad = postTweetUpdate($str, $mediaToUpload); ?> <h3>Debug</h3> <pre><?PHP print_r($payLoad); ?></pre> I have the Debug part because its handy to see what is returned from the Twitter API.
×
×
  • Create New...