I know long titel -- I could not think of anything else ;)
So I am writing a python script which will save elements of the Twitter Search API to a csv file
writer = csv.writer(open('stocks.csv', 'a', buffering=0))
writer.writerows([(screen_name, hashtags, expanded_url , coordinates , geo , in_reply_to_user_id, followers)])
But I want to add how many followers the tweeting user has!
Now this is done via the GET users/lookup Twitter API which is limited to 350 requests per hour but allows simultaneous look up of up to 100 users
right now my script when finding a tweet looks up the users followers and pasts it with all the info of the tweet into the csv file.
This works great but after 350 searches I hit my limit!!!!
Now my question is: Can I make the script search 100 times and store the hundred usernames somewhere and once it hits 100 it calles the GET users/lookup and inserts the info right of the search info into the excel file:
Excel example:
[info from search ...(in many columns)] [followers of the user who sent the tweet]
[info from search ...(in many columns)] [followers of the user who sent the tweet]
[info from search ...(in many columns)] [followers of the user who sent the tweet]
As per request:
import urllib2
import urllib
import json
import time
s = u'@apple OR @iphone OR @aapl OR @imac OR @ipad OR @mac OR @macbook OR macbook OR mac OR ipad OR iphone 4s OR iphone 5 OR @iphone4s OR @ iphone 5 OR aapl OR iphone'
info = urllib2.quote(s.encode("utf8"))
page = "?q="
openurl = urllib.urlopen("http://search.twitter.com/search.json"+ page + info)
quota = 150
user = 'twitter'
user_info = urllib.urlopen("https://api.twitter.com/1/users/lookup.json?screen_name="+user)
while quota > 10:
openurl2 = urllib.urlopen("https://api.twitter.com/1/account/rate_limit_status.json")
twitter_quota = openurl2.read()
quota_json = json.loads(twitter_quota)
quota = quota_json['remaining_hits']
twitter_search = openurl.read()
table_search = json.loads(twitter_search)
print table_search
print str(table_search[u'results'][1][u'iso_language_code'])
lines = 0
linesmax = len(table_search[u'results'])
print linesmax
while lines < linesmax:
table_timeline_inner = table_search[u'results'][lines]
next = table_search[u'next_page']
lang = table_timeline_inner[u'iso_language_code']
to = table_timeline_inner[u'to_user_name']
text = table_timeline_inner[u'text']
user = table_timeline_inner[u'from_user']
geo = table_timeline_inner[u'geo']
time = table_timeline_inner[u'created_at']
result_type = table_timeline_inner[u'metadata'][u'result_type']
id = table_timeline_inner[u'id']
writerowswith a list of one element, you know you could just usewriterow? – katrielalex Jan 17 '12 at 13:50