Our great sponsors
twurl | ish | |
---|---|---|
42 | 152 | |
1,790 | 15,995 | |
0.4% | 2.2% | |
2.2 | 9.7 | |
9 months ago | 1 day ago | |
Ruby | C | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
twurl
-
ManyShiba - The World's Greatest Twitter Bot
After registering a Twitter App, make sure to enable Read/Write permissions in the App settings. Create an .env file in the root of the project based on .env.example. We can use this data in our file with an object like this:
-
Error 453 - Tweepy with Python
Hello guys! I have spent a few hours now, trying to get my tweepy to work. I have made an app on developer.twitter.com, trying to post somwthing on twitter. I feel like I have tried everything, and I have even consulted my friend ChatGPT for help, but I keep getting lost in the documentation and GPT is of no help in this case!
-
AmputatorBot: Saluting 1K Members and Waving Off Twitter
Please visit developer.twitter.com to sign up to our new Free, Basic or Enterprise access tiers.
-
I made an open-source app to export your Reddit or Twitter Bookmarks directly into Notion.
In the meantime, you can learn more about the Twitter API v2 and find resources on developer.twitter.com. We appreciate your continued interest in developing on the Twitter API.
-
Building your own Twitter Thread Generator
As a prerequisite, you need a Twitter Developer account. With a Twitter account, it's easy: navigate to https://developer.twitter.com and register a new app. Make sure that you create a Twitter app that has read and write permissions!
-
Some popular accounts likely to disappear from Twitter as Elon Musk ends free access to API
This kind of has us scrambling a bit, actually. Not because we'd have to pay per se, but rather we've been using their API for so long on our website (and def still on v1.1) that now when we check the developer site it just funnels to a "Sign up" and no longer shows us our existing/old apps, so we cannot find/figure out which account was linked to our production credentials (and that's really on us for not staying on top of which account that was).
-
Take ownership of your Twitter data, set-up your own Twitter updated archive in GitHub
To start the process to become a "Twitter developer" visit developer.twitter.com, sign-in and start the process... It may be an annoying process with manually reviews.
-
20 Unique APIs For Your Next Project
Twitter API
-
Create a Twitter bot in python - part 1
2 - Create a developer account that you will associate with your Twitter account. To do this, go to https://developer.twitter.com. You click on Sign up, then you will have to follow the instructions and choose the Bot option for the use you will make of the API. Once you have created your account, you will be assigned a Bearer Token. Keep it safe, as you will need it to make your requests later.
-
How to use Twitter OAuth 2.0 and Passport.js for user login
To start using Twitter API, you need to register for a developer account (including phone number verification). Once you register, you will be prompted to create the first application. You will immediately receive API Key and API Key Secret – but ignore them, since these are only for OAuth 1.0. Instead, go to your project's dashboard, there go to the App Settings of the only application you created. In application settings, find User authentication settings and click Set up.
ish
-
Homelab Adventures: Crafting a Personal Tech Playground
iSH
-
Ente: Open-Source, E2E Encrypted, Google Photos Alternative
They don't "allow" it, but most apps that need background execution just ask permission for geolocation tracking and pretend to use it, for example iSH[1]. There are a few activities that the app can do to prevent itself from being suspended when it goes out of focus, like playing sound, geolocation etc.
[1] https://github.com/ish-app/ish/issues/249#issuecomment-54433...
-
How to copy a file between devices?
Android: install termux, `pkg install openssh`, and preferably run `termux-setup-storage` to give it access to storage folders.
iOS: I think https://ish.app/ ?
-
How Virtualisation came to Apple Silicon Macs
This of course hasn't been true for years, eg: http://omz-software.com/pythonista/index.html
And you can run a C compiler (or anything) inside https://ish.app/ too.
-
ScummVM officially released in the App Store
False. iSH is an x86 "bytecode" emulator.
"Possibly the most interesting thing I wrote as part of iSH is the JIT. It's not actually a JIT since it doesn't target machine code. Instead it generates an array of pointers to functions called gadgets, and each gadget ends with a tailcall to the next function; like the threaded code technique used by some Forth interpreters."
https://github.com/ish-app/ish
-
Windows is now an app for iPhones, iPads, Macs, and PCs
There is an x86 virtual machkne running Linux available on the App Store now.
https://ish.app/
Now would Apple allow a full blown Windows VM is a different question
-
Stop EU Chat Control
There are plenty of solutions for running Python in an IDE on the iPad. There is an even an x86 emulator and a Linux terminal built on top of it in the App Store.
https://ish.app/
It can run anything that you can run on an x86 in user mode. I downloaded the AWS CLI (which requires Python) to run some tests
By the way, you were completely wrong about VSCode being written in .Net.
> That's just compiling the code to a native binary, which you would then have to go submit through Apple's store. How does that help for an IDE expected to allow you to test (i.e. execute) and debug the code you've just written ten seconds ago?
There is an existence proof that it could be done. If you ran iSH with remote VNC you could have a full IDE on a Mac.
> We can see right there some examples of what isn't allowed:
- ISH: Linux shell running on iOS/iPadOS, using usermode x86 emulation
- Lima: A nice way to run Linux VMs on Mac
-
Buying an iPad Pro for coding was a mistake
Not making any statement regarding the mentioned workflow issues (I mostly agree with them), I really like iSH [1] for this sort thing.
It’s a “good enough” solution for the “I just quickly need to do something in a terminal” problems.
And because it’s an x86 Alpine Linux it can even run simple binaries if needed.
But for me it still couldn’t replace a dedicated laptop for proper tasks.
[1]: https://github.com/ish-app/ish
What are some alternatives?
Tweepy - Twitter for Python!
UTM - Virtual machines for iOS and macOS
tweets-docker-pipeline - Docker pipeline for streaming tweets and their sentiment score to a Slack channel
termux-packages - A package build system for Termux.
Visual Studio Code - Visual Studio Code
box64 - Box64 - Linux Userspace x86_64 Emulator with a twist, targeted at ARM64 Linux devices
azure-docs - Open source documentation of Microsoft Azure
AltStore - AltStore is an alternative app store for non-jailbroken iOS devices.
azure-storage-node - Microsoft Azure Storage SDK for Node.js
Code-Server - VS Code in the browser
Docker Compose - Define and run multi-container applications with Docker
Blizzard-Jailbreak - An Open-Source iOS 11.0 -> 11.4.1 (soon iOS 13) Jailbreak, made for teaching purposes.