Skip to content

Swift library for the Twitter API v1 and v2 🍷

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

TheCodeor/TwitterAPIKit

Β 
Β 

Repository files navigation

TwitterAPIKit

Swift library for the Twitter API v1 and v2.

Swift Standard v2 codecov

Please see this issue for the progress of the API implementation.

Issue γ‚„γ‚³γƒ‘γƒ³γƒˆγ―ζ—₯本θͺžγ§γ‚‚ε€§δΈˆε€«γ§γ™γ€‚


Motivation

Unfortunately, I couldn't find any active Twitter API library for Swift at the moment.

So, I decided to create one.

Policy

  • No dependencies

API Structures

You can limit the scope of available APIs depending on your application. This is useful if your app only supports v1, or if you want to limit access to the API. Currently, scoping according to Twitter's App permissions is not yet implemented.

// The most common usage.

// For OAuth 1.0a
let client = TwitterAPIClient(.oauth10a(.init(
            consumerKey: "",
            consumerSecret: "",
            oauthToken: "",
            oauthTokenSecret: ""
        )))
// For OAuth 2.0 client
let client = TwitterAPIClient(.oauth20(.init(
            clientID: "",
            scope: [],
            tokenType: "",
            expiresIn: 0,
            accessToken: "",
            refreshToken: ""
        )))

client.v1.someV1API()
client.v2.someV2API()

// V1 only client
let v1Client = client.v1
v1Client.someV1API()

// V2 only client
let v2Client = client.v2
v2Client.someV2API()

// DM only client
let dmClient = client.v1.directMessage
dmClient.someDM_APIs()

// Each API can be accessed flatly or by individual resource.

// Flat.
let client.v1.allV1_APIs()

// Individual resources.
let client.v1.tweet.someTweetAPIs()
let client.v1.directMessage.someDM_APIs()

How do I authenticate?

Please see "HowDoIAuthenticate.md"

And the following sample project includes a sample authentication.

https://github.com/mironal/TwitterAPIKit-iOS-sample

How to decode response

Please see "HowToDecodeResponse.md"

Linux support (experimental)

TwitterAPIKit can be used on Linux, but cannot be merged into the main branch because it cannot run tests.

If you want to use it on Linux, use THIS BRANCH.

Example

Projects

This sample project contains examples of how to authenticate with OAuth 1.0a User Access Tokens (3-legged OAuth flow) and OAuth 2.0 Authorization Code Flow with PKCE.

Basic

    let consumerKey = ""
    let consumerSecret = ""
    let oauthToken = ""
    let oauthTokenSecret = ""

    let client = TwitterAPIClient(
        consumerKey: consumerKey,
        consumerSecret: consumerSecret,
        oauthToken: oauthToken,
        oauthTokenSecret: oauthTokenSecret
    )

    client.v1.getShowStatus(.init(id: "status id"))
         // Already serialized using "JSONSerialization.jsonObject(with:, options:)".
        .responseObject() { response in }
        .responseObject(queue: .global(qos: .default)) { response in  }

        // Already decoded using JSONDecoder.
        .responseDecodable(type: Entity.self, queue: .global(qos: .default)) { response in }
        .responseDecodable(type: Entity.self) { response in }

        // Unprocessed data
        .responseData() { response in /* Run in .main queue */ }
        .responseData((queue: .global(qos: .default)) { response in /* Run in .global(qos: .default) queue  */ }

        // !! A `prettyString` is provided for debugging purposes. !!
        print(response.prettyString)

        result.map((Success) -> NewSuccess)
        result.tryMap((Success) throws -> NewSuccess)
        result.mapError((TwitterAPIKitError) -> TwitterAPIKitError>)
        result.success // Success?
        result.error // TwitterAPIKitError?
        response.rateLimit

        // Use result
        do {
            let success = try response.result.get()
            print(success)
        } catch let error {
            print(error)
        }
    }

Refresh OAuth 2.0 Token

let refresh = try await client.refreshOAuth20Token(type: .confidentialClient(clientID: "", clientSecret: ""), forceRefresh: true)
// let refresh = try await client.refreshOAuth20Token(type: .publicClient, forceRefresh: true)

// The authentication information in the Client is also updated, so there is no need to recreate a new instance of the Client.

if refresh.refreshed {
    storeToken(refresh.token)
}

// Or

client.refreshOAuth20Token(type: .publicClient, forceRefresh: true) { result in
    do {
        let refresh = try result.get()
        if refresh.refreshed {
            storeToken(refresh.token)
        }
    } catch {

    }
}

// Notification

NotificationCenter.default.addObserver(
    self,
    selector: #selector(didRefreshOAuth20Token(_:)),
    name: TwitterAPIClient.didRefreshOAuth20Token,
    object: nil
)

@objc func didRefreshOAuth20Token(_ notification: Notification) {
    guard let token = notification.userInfo?[TwitterAPIClient.tokenUserInfoKey] as? TwitterAuthenticationMethod.OAuth20 else {
        fatalError()
    }
    print("didRefreshOAuth20Token", didRefreshOAuth20Token, token)
    store(token)
}

Custom Request class

The class of each request can be inherited to create subclasses. This is why it is declared as an open class instead of a struct.

This is intended so that when new parameters are added due to changes in the Twitter API, you can handle them yourself without waiting for the library to be updated.

// example
class CustomListsListRequestV1: GetListsListRequestV1 {

    let custom: String

    override var parameters: [String: Any] {
        var p = super.parameters
        p["custom"] = custom
        return p
    }

    init(custom: String, user: TwitterUserIdentifierV1, reverse: Bool? = .none) {
        self.custom = custom
        super.init(user: user, reverse: reverse)
    }
}

It is also possible to create an encapsulated custom request class.

class CapsuledListsListRequestV1: GetListsListRequestV1 {
    init() {
        super.init(user: .userID("100"), reverse: true)
    }
}

Low level api

This method is intended to be used when the library does not yet support Twitter's new API.

  • You can customize the request yourself.
  • You can use session.send(TwitterAPIRequest,completionHandler:) to send the request.
    class YourCustomRequest: TwitterAPIRequest {
        // write code...
    }


    let consumerKey = ""
    let consumerSecret = ""
    let oauthToken = ""
    let oauthTokenSecret = ""

    let client = TwitterAPIClient(
        consumerKey: consumerKey,
        consumerSecret: consumerSecret,
        oauthToken: oauthToken,
        oauthTokenSecret: oauthTokenSecret
    )

    let request = YourCustomRequest()
    client.session.send(request)
}

Swift Concurrency (experimental)

Task {
    let result = try await client.v1.timeline.getHomeTimeline(.init()).responseData // or responseObject or response responseDecodable(type: Hoge.self)

    print(result.prettyString)
}

Stream API

TODO

  • Support API v1 endpoint : 85% completed (Commonly used APIs are 100% supported.)
  • Support API v2 endpoint: 100% completed (Except for Lab)
  • Swift Concurrency (Experimental)
  • Document

About

Swift library for the Twitter API v1 and v2 🍷

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Swift 98.0%
  • JavaScript 1.9%
  • Shell 0.1%