4

A few days ago, I posted this question and this question asking about how to post "Hello World" to twitter. I've gotten helpful responses, which have propelled me further along, but I'm still lost.

I need to use OAuth because (as I read it) using username and password is going to be deprecated soon.

I need an example as simple as updating the status with the string constant 'Hello World!'.

My client is specifying that I must use C#.

5 Answers 5

18

Definitely use Linq2Twitter -

http://linqtotwitter.codeplex.com/

It's UpdateStatus method has 11 overloads - the whole implementation is really nice. So you're example would be:

var tweet = twitterCtx.UpdateStatus("Hello world");
6
9

I'd like to post this here as it took me far too long to work out and is what I would consider to be a minimum requirement for a Hello World to Twitter using Linq2Twitter now that OAuth is mandatory. Hopefully this will be of use to anyone like me who ended up on this page but found it didn't solve their problem.

using LinqToTwitter;
var auth = new SingleUserAuthorizer
{
    Credentials = new InMemoryCredentials
    {
        ConsumerKey = "yourConsumerKey",
        ConsumerSecret = "yourConsumerSecret",
        OAuthToken = "yourOAuthToken",
        AccessToken = "yourAccessToken"
    }
};

var service = new TwitterContext(auth);

var tweet = service.UpdateStatus("hello twitter");
2
  • Thanks @zithery! This was a summer project for me back in 2010. Jun 19, 2013 at 16:52
  • Great post. This level of simple example documentation is missing from the Linq2Twitter doco and needs to be added. Too theoretical and not enough simple practical examples like this. Cheers
    – Aaron
    Feb 15, 2014 at 8:56
2

What API are you using? have you tried Twitterizer. It should be relatively simple to do.

5
  • I really liked Twitterizer as well, but what stopped me is that it seems to only work in full trust mode, which (stupid me) I have GoDaddy as my hosting provider, so that's a no-go.
    – Joe Enos
    May 21, 2010 at 14:01
  • I was going to say that Twitterizer doesn't support OAuth, but apparently Twitterizer2 does! twitterizer.net/tutorials/getting-started-with-oauth
    – Dave
    May 21, 2010 at 14:04
  • Joe: I don't understand how GoDaddy as a hosting provider fits here. Are you hosting a C# program via GoDaddy? What? May 21, 2010 at 16:00
  • @cf_PhillipSenn: I have ASP.NET websites that are hosted on GoDaddy, so they are just running normal .NET code. When I wrote an app that used Twitterizer, the app bombed out because it required full trust. I did eventually get it to work with a slightly modified version of Linq2Twitter instead of Twitterizer.
    – Joe Enos
    May 21, 2010 at 21:55
  • @cf_PhillipSenn: To clarify, since it looks like you're not a .NET guy, C# is one of many languages that compile to .NET code. That .NET code can run in a console app, Windows form, or ASP.NET app (or lots of other types). So the Twitterizer library can be plugged into any type of .NET app, including ASP.NET, and function the exact same way. However, with ASP.NET, in order to do some specific things (reflection, security permission, etc.), you need to run in "full trust", which GoDaddy doesn't allow. So the same DLL that worked in my console app, didn't work once published to the website.
    – Joe Enos
    May 21, 2010 at 22:00
2

I highly recommend that you use TweetSharp. It is very robust, supports the scenario you specify above (uses OAuth to authenticate).

I've used it on a few pet projects and I've been extremely happy with it. The download comes with a WPF sample application that shows you how to use twitter's OAuth implementation.

1
  • It was but its now out of date, not supported and my old project which used TweetSharp suddenly stopped working mid way through last year as something on Twitter's end changed.
    – Aaron
    Feb 15, 2014 at 8:57
1

I don't have enough reputation to comment to zithrey but I also agree, linq2twitter's getting started documentation hurts and the project loaded with errors making it unrunnable. Hopefully this will help someone - it uses PIN authorization

static void Main(string[] args)
{
    string ckey = "consumerkey";
    string csecret = "consumersecret";

    var auth = new PinAuthorizer()
    {
        Credentials = new InMemoryCredentials
        {
            ConsumerKey = ckey,
            ConsumerSecret = csecret
        },
        GoToTwitterAuthorization = pageLink => Process.Start(pageLink),
        GetPin = () =>
        {
            Console.WriteLine(
                "\nAfter authorizing this application, Twitter " +
                "will give you a 7-digit PIN Number.\n"
            );
            Console.Write("Enter the PIN number here: ");
            return Console.ReadLine();
        }
    };
    auth.Authorize();
    var twitterCtx = new TwitterContext(auth);
    twitterCtx.UpdateStatus("This status has been created from a C# console app!");
}
1
  • Spot on and I agree. The doco of that project is lame and they need more simple, practical examples added.
    – Aaron
    Feb 15, 2014 at 8:58

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.