Twitter CLI
A command-line power tool for Twitter.
The CLI takes syntactic cues from the Twitter SMS commands, however it offers vastly more commands and capabilities than are available via SMS.
Installation
First, make sure you have Ruby installed.
On a Mac, open /Applications/Utilities/Terminal.app
and type:
ruby -v
If the output looks something like this, you're in good shape:
ruby 1.9.3p194 (2012-04-20 revision 35410) [x86_64-darwin12.0.0]
If the output looks more like this, you need to install Ruby:
ruby: command not found
On Windows, you can install Ruby with RubyInstaller.
Once you've verified that Ruby is installed, type:
gem install t
Configuration
Twitter requires OAuth for most of its functionality, so you'll need a registered Twitter application. If you've never registered a Twitter application before, it's easy! Just sign-in using your Twitter account and the fill out the short form at http://dev.twitter.com/apps/new. If you've previously registered a Twitter application, it should be listed at http://dev.twitter.com/apps. Once you've registered an application, make sure to set your application's Access Level to "Read, Write and Access direct messages", otherwise you'll receive an error that looks like this:
Read-only application cannot POST
Now, you're ready to authorize a Twitter account with your application. To proceed, type the following command at the prompt and follow the instructions:
t authorize
This command will direct you to a URL where you can sign-in to Twitter,
authorize the application, and then enter the returned PIN back into the
terminal. If you type the PIN correctly, you should now be authorized to use
t
as that user. To authorize multiple accounts, simply repeat the last step,
signing into Twitter as a different user.
You can see a list of all the accounts you've authorized by typing the command:
t accounts
The output of which will be structured like this:
sferik
UDfNTpOz5ZDG4a6w7dIWj
uuP7Xbl2mEfGMiDu1uIyFN
gem
thG9EfWoADtIr6NjbL9ON (active)
Note: One of your authorized accounts (specifically, the last one
authorized) will be set as active. To change the active account, use the set
subcommand, passing either just a username, if it's unambiguous, or a username
and consumer key pair, like this:
t set active sferik UDfNTpOz5ZDG4a6w7dIWj
Account information is stored in a YAML-formatted file located at ~/.trc
.
Note: Anyone with access to this file can impersonate you on Twitter, so
it's important to keep it secure, just as you would treat your SSH private key.
For this reason, the file is hidden and has the permission bits set to 0600
.
Usage Examples
Typing t help
will list all the available commands. You can type t help TASK
to get help for a specific command.
t help
Update your status
t update "I'm tweeting from the command line. Isn't that special?"
Note: If your tweet includes special characters (e.g. !
), make sure to
wrap it in single quotes instead of double quotes, so those characters are not
interpreted by your shell. (However, if you use single quotes, your Tweet
obviously can't contain any apostrophes.)
Retrieve detailed information about a Twitter user
t whois @sferik
Retrieve stats for multiple users
t users -l @sferik @gem
Follow users
t follow @sferik @gem
Check whether one user follows another
t does_follow @ev @sferik
Note: If the first user does not follow the second, t
will exit with a
non-zero exit code. This allows you to execute commands conditionally, for
example, send a user a direct message only if he already follows you:
t does_follow @ev && t dm @ev "What's up, bro?"
Create a list for everyone you're following
t list create following-`date "+%Y-%m-%d"`
Add everyone you're following to that list (up to 500 users)
t followings | xargs t list add following-`date "+%Y-%m-%d"`
List all the members of a list, in long format
t list members -l following-`date "+%Y-%m-%d"`
List all your lists, in long format
t lists -l
List all your friends, in long format, ordered by number of followers
t friends -lf
List all your leaders (people you follow who don't follow you back)
t leaders -lf
Unfollow everyone you follow who doesn't follow you back
t leaders | xargs t unfollow
Unfollow 10 people who haven't tweeted in the longest time
t followings -lw | head -10 | awk '{print $1}' | xargs t unfollow
Twitter roulette: randomly follow someone who follows you (who you don't already follow)
t groupies | shuf | head -1 | xargs t follow
Favorite the last 10 tweets that mention you
t mentions -n 10 -l | awk '{print $1}' | xargs t favorite
Output the last 200 tweets in your timeline to a CSV file
t timeline -n 200 --csv > timeline.csv
Start streaming your timeline (Control-C to stop)
t stream timeline
Count the number of employees who work for Twitter
t list members twitter team | wc -l
Search Twitter for the 20 most recent Tweets that match a specified query
t search all "query"
Download the latest Linux kernel via BitTorrent (possibly NSFW, depending where you work)
t search all "lang:en filter:links linux torrent" -n 1 | grep -o "http://t.co/[0-9A-Za-z]*" | xargs open
Search Tweets you've favorited that match a specified query
t search favorites "query"
Search Tweets mentioning you that match a specified query
t search mentions "query"
Search Tweets you've retweeted that match a specified query
t search retweets "query"
Search Tweets in your timeline that match a specified query
t search timeline "query"
Search Tweets in another user's timeline that match a specified query
t search user @sferik "query"
Features
- Deep search: Instead of using the Twitter Search API, [which only only goes
back 6-9 days][index],
t search
fetches up to 3,200 tweets via the REST API and then checks each one against a regular expression. - Multithreaded: Whenever possible, Twitter API requests are made in parallel, resulting in faster performance for bulk operations.
- Designed for Unix: Output is designed to be piped to other Unix utilities, like grep, comm, cut, awk, bc, wc, and xargs for advanced text processing.
- Generate spreadsheets: Convert the output of any command to CSV format simply
by adding the
--csv
flag. - 95% C0 Code Coverage: Well tested, with a 2.5:1 test-to-code ratio.
Using T for Backup
@jphpsf wrote a blog post explaining how to use t
to backup
your Twitter account.
t
was also mentioned on an episode of the Ruby 5 podcast.
If you discuss t
in a blog post or podcast, let me know and I'll
link it here.
Relationship Terminology
There is some ambiguity in the terminology used to describe relationships on
Twitter. For example, some people use the term "friends" to mean everyone you
follow. In t
, "friends" refers to just the subset of people who follow you
back (i.e., friendship is bidirectional). Here is the full table of terminology
used by t
:
___________________________________________________
| | |
| YOU FOLLOW THEM | YOU DON'T FOLLOW THEM |
_________________________|_________________________|_________________________|_________________________
| | | | |
| THEY FOLLOW YOU | friends | groupies | followers |
|_________________________|_________________________|_________________________|_________________________|
| | |
| THEY DON'T FOLLOW YOU | leaders |
|_________________________|_________________________|
| |
| followings |
|_________________________|
Screenshots
History
The twitter gem previously contained a command-line interface, up until version 0.5.0, when it was removed. This project is offered as a sucessor to that effort, however it is a clean room implementation that contains none of the original code.
Contributing
In the spirit of free software, everyone is encouraged to help improve this project.
Here are some ways you can contribute:
- by using alpha, beta, and prerelease versions
- by reporting bugs
- by suggesting new features
- by writing or editing documentation
- by writing specifications
- by writing code (no patch is too small: fix typos, add comments, clean up inconsistent whitespace)
- by refactoring code
- by fixing issues
- by reviewing patches
- financially
Submitting an Issue
We use the GitHub issue tracker to track bugs and features. Before submitting a bug report or feature request, check to make sure it hasn't already been submitted. When submitting a bug report, please include a Gist that includes a stack trace and any details that may be necessary to reproduce the bug, including your gem version, Ruby version, and operating system. Ideally, a bug report should include a pull request with failing specs.
Submitting a Pull Request
- Fork the repository.
- Create a topic branch.
- Add specs for your unimplemented feature or bug fix.
- Run
bundle exec rake spec
. If your specs pass, return to step 3. - Implement your feature or bug fix.
- Run
bundle exec rake spec
. If your specs fail, return to step 5. - Run
open coverage/index.html
. If your changes are not completely covered by your tests, return to step 3. - Add, commit, and push your changes.
- Submit a pull request.
Supported Ruby Versions
This library aims to support and is tested against the following Ruby implementations:
- Ruby 1.8.7
- Ruby 1.9.2
- Ruby 1.9.3
If something doesn't work on one of these Ruby versions, it's a bug.
This library may inadvertently work (or seem to work) on other Ruby implementations, however support will only be provided for the versions listed above.
If you would like this library to support another Ruby version, you may volunteer to be a maintainer. Being a maintainer entails making sure all tests run and pass on that implementation. When something breaks on your implementation, you will be responsible for providing patches in a timely fashion. If critical issues for a particular implementation exist at the time of a major release, support for that Ruby version may be dropped.
Copyright
Copyright (c) 2011 Erik Michaels-Ober. See [LICENSE][] for details. Application icon by [@nvk][nvk]. [license]: https://github.com/sferik/t/blob/master/LICENSE.md [nvk]: http://rodolfonovak.com