Authenticate and request a user's timeline with Twitter API 1.1 oAuth
This morning I have received the dreaded 'The Twitter REST API v1 is no longer active. Please migrate to API v1.1.' error in a few of my web sites.
Previously I have been using javascript/json to make these calls to http://api.twitter.com/1/statuses/user_timeline.json? to display a timeline.
As this is no longer available I need to adopt the new 1.1 API process.
I need to do the following using HttpWebRequest objects not a 3rd party application:
- Authenticate using oauth key and secret
- Make an authenticated call to pull back to display users timeline
Solution 1:
Here is what I did to get this working in a simple example.
I had to generate an oAuth consumer key and secret from Twitter at:
https://dev.twitter.com/apps/new
I deserialized the authentication object first to get the token and type back in order to authenticate the timeline call.
The timeline call simply reads the json as that is all I need to do, you may want to deserialize it yourself into an object.
I have created a project for this at : https://github.com/andyhutch77/oAuthTwitterWrapper
Update - I have updated the github project to include both asp .net web app & mvc app example demos and nuget install.
// You need to set your own keys and screen name
var oAuthConsumerKey = "superSecretKey";
var oAuthConsumerSecret = "superSecretSecret";
var oAuthUrl = "https://api.twitter.com/oauth2/token";
var screenname = "aScreenName";
// Do the Authenticate
var authHeaderFormat = "Basic {0}";
var authHeader = string.Format(authHeaderFormat,
Convert.ToBase64String(Encoding.UTF8.GetBytes(Uri.EscapeDataString(oAuthConsumerKey) + ":" +
Uri.EscapeDataString((oAuthConsumerSecret)))
));
var postBody = "grant_type=client_credentials";
HttpWebRequest authRequest = (HttpWebRequest)WebRequest.Create(oAuthUrl);
authRequest.Headers.Add("Authorization", authHeader);
authRequest.Method = "POST";
authRequest.ContentType = "application/x-www-form-urlencoded;charset=UTF-8";
authRequest.AutomaticDecompression = DecompressionMethods.GZip | DecompressionMethods.Deflate;
using (Stream stream = authRequest.GetRequestStream())
{
byte[] content = ASCIIEncoding.ASCII.GetBytes(postBody);
stream.Write(content, 0, content.Length);
}
authRequest.Headers.Add("Accept-Encoding", "gzip");
WebResponse authResponse = authRequest.GetResponse();
// deserialize into an object
TwitAuthenticateResponse twitAuthResponse;
using (authResponse)
{
using (var reader = new StreamReader(authResponse.GetResponseStream())) {
JavaScriptSerializer js = new JavaScriptSerializer();
var objectText = reader.ReadToEnd();
twitAuthResponse = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<TwitAuthenticateResponse>(objectText);
}
}
// Do the timeline
var timelineFormat = "https://api.twitter.com/1.1/statuses/user_timeline.json?screen_name={0}&include_rts=1&exclude_replies=1&count=5";
var timelineUrl = string.Format(timelineFormat, screenname);
HttpWebRequest timeLineRequest = (HttpWebRequest)WebRequest.Create(timelineUrl);
var timelineHeaderFormat = "{0} {1}";
timeLineRequest.Headers.Add("Authorization", string.Format(timelineHeaderFormat, twitAuthResponse.token_type, twitAuthResponse.access_token));
timeLineRequest.Method = "Get";
WebResponse timeLineResponse = timeLineRequest.GetResponse();
var timeLineJson = string.Empty;
using (timeLineResponse)
{
using (var reader = new StreamReader(timeLineResponse.GetResponseStream()))
{
timeLineJson = reader.ReadToEnd();
}
}
public class TwitAuthenticateResponse {
public string token_type { get; set; }
public string access_token { get; set; }
}
Solution 2:
Created a JS only solution to get Twitter posts on your site without using new API - can now specify number of tweets too: http://goo.gl/JinwJ