An asynchronous 'engine' for aggregating News Headlines from your own Twitter Lists.
A command line tool for managing Twitter lists
Virtualized lists for React Native.
Angular directives using the native HTML Drag And Drop API
official twitter text linkification
A markdown-it plugin to create GitHub-style task lists
Continents & countries: ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 code, name, ISO 639-1 languages, capital, currency, native name, phone. JSON, CSV and SQL.
A node.js module for parsing form data, especially file uploads.
The internal Lo-Dash variable `objectTypes` as a Node.js module generated by lodash-cli.
The Material Components for the web list component
Virtualized lists for React Native macOS.
The set of Unicode symbols that can serve as a base for emoji modifiers, i.e. those with the `Emoji_Modifier_Base` property set to `Yes`.
Memory Efficient Serialization Library
Strongly typed, full-featured, light, versatile yet powerful Twitter API v1.1 and v2 client for Node.js.
Multi-level list feature for CKEditor 5.
The listview control allows you to select an item or multiple items from a list-like interface and represents the data in interactive hierarchical structure across different layouts or views.
The internal Lo-Dash function `shimKeys` as a Node.js module generated by lodash-cli.
📚 The Token Lists specification
React Twitter Embed Components
A BroadcastChannel that works in New Browsers, Old Browsers, WebWorkers, NodeJs, Deno and iframes
The internal Lo-Dash function `slice` as a Node.js module generated by lodash-cli.
Parser for identifying Twemoji in text
Parse CSS and add vendor prefixes to CSS rules using values from the Can I Use website
A Compiler for Web Components and Progressive Web Apps
A library and command-line tool for working with Twitter lists
A command-line client for manipulating large Twitter lists in the shell, shell scripts, etc. Currently supports ------------------ - OAuth authentication - Showing a users's followers/following - Following and unfollowing users - Showing, adding, and removing a members from a list
A command line tool that can update and manage todo list on twitter.
TweepML is an XML format used to represent a list of Tweeps (Twitter users).
Provides date, time, number, and list formatting functionality for various Twitter-supported locales in Javascript.
Returns a list of frequently tweeted words
Cross Tweetbot off your list. TTT is your Twitter CLI
It read file containing list of urls and produces output file with domain, page title, twitter, facebook and google plus handles found on the page
Twitter word clouds. Analyse the frequency of word occurrences for a user or list of users. Configurable - set the words to ignore, the range of dates to look at, and whether to include hashtags, @-mentions, and URLs. Customize your Twitter configuration, too. Sensible defaults are provided for all options. Look at the data in different ways. Easily convert and/or export to CSV and JSON. Change configuration options on the fly and re-audit with ease.
ZMediumToMarkdown converts Medium posts into clean, portable Markdown. It can download a single post or every post from a Medium username, preserving headings, lists, blockquotes, code blocks, images, links, and common embeds such as GitHub Gists, Twitter / X, YouTube, Vimeo, SoundCloud, and Spotify. Images are downloaded locally, with output paths ready for plain Markdown or Jekyll projects.
When provided a valid Twitter handle, allows for command-line access to the given user's most recent tweets. Permits the retrieval of individual tweets and can provide ordered lists outlining the following details from the user's recent tweets: their most frequently used words; any embedded pictures or videos; any embedded hyperlinks; any #hashtags or @usernames mentioned; any numbers, such as years or times of day; any acronyms mentioned; and, last but definitely not least, anything the tweeter felt passionately enough about to SCREAM IN ALL CAPS.
Twitterpunch =============== Twitterpunch is designed to work with PhotoBooth and OS X Folder Actions. When this script is called with the name of an image file, it will post the image to Twitter, along with a message randomly chosen from a list and a specified hashtag. If you call the script with the `--stream` argument instead, it will listen for tweets to that hashtag and download them to a specified directory. If the tweet came from another user, Twitterpunch will speak it aloud. Typically, you'll run one copy on an OSX laptop with PhotoBooth, and a separate copy on another machine (either Windows or OSX) for the viewer. You can also use a mobile device as a remote control, if you like. This will allow the user to enter a custom message for each photo that gets tweeted out, if they'd like. Configuration =========== Configure the program via the `~/.twitterpunch/config.yaml` YAML file. This file should look similar to the example below. --- :twitter: # twitter configuration :consumer_key: <consumer key> :consumer_secret: <consumer secret> :access_token: <access token> :access_token_secret: <access secret> :messages: # list of messages to attach - Hello there # to outgoing tweets - I'm a posting fool - minimally viable product :hashtag: Twitterpunch # The hashtag to post and listen to :handle: Twitterpunch # The twitter username to post as :photodir: ~/Pictures/twitterpunch/ # Where to save downloaded images :logfile: ~/.twitterpunch/activity.log # Where to save logs :viewer: # Use the built-in slideshow viewer :count: 5 # How many images to have onscreen at once :remote: :timeout: 45 # How long the button should remain disabled for :apptitle: dslrBooth # The photo booth application title :hotkey: space # Which hotkey to send to trigger a photo 1. Generate a skeleton configuration file * `twitterpunch --configure` 1. Edit the configuration file as needed. You'll be prompted with the path. * If you have your own Twitter application credentials, you're welcome to use them. 1. Authorize the application with the Twitter API. * `twitterpunch --authorize` Usage ========== ### Using OS X PhotoBooth 1. Start PhotoBooth at least once to generate its library. 1. Install the Twitterpunch Folder Action * `twitterpunch --install` * It may claim that it could not be attached, fear not. 1. Profit! * _and by that, I mean take some shots with PhotoBooth!_ *Note*: if the folder action doesn't seem to work and photos aren't posted to Twitter, here are some troubleshooting steps to take: 1. Run Twitterpunch by hand with photos as arguments. This may help you isolate configuration or authorization issues. * `twitterpunch foo.jpg` 1. Correct the path in the workflow. * `which twitterpunch` * Edit the Twitterpunch folder action to include that path. #### Using the remote web app Configure the remote web app using the `:remote` hash in `config.yaml`. You can usually find the title of the app using `system_profiler -detailLevel full SPApplicationsDataType` and grepping for the name or path to the `.app`. In this example, the title is _dslrBooth_. [ben@ganymede] ~ $ system_profiler -detailLevel full SPApplicationsDataType | grep -B8 dslrBooth.app dslrBooth: Version: 2.9 Obtained from: Identified Developer Last Modified: 10/14/17, 9:50 PM Kind: Intel 64-Bit (Intel): Yes Signed by: Developer ID Application: Hope Pictures LLC (MZR5GHAQX4), Developer ID Certification Authority, Apple Root CA Location: /Applications/dslrBooth.app 1. Run the app with `twitterpunch --remote` 1. Browse to the app with http://{address}:8080 1. [optional] If on an iOS device, add to your homescreen * This will give you "app behaviour", such as full screen, and a nice icon #### Troubleshooting. 1. Make sure the folder action is installed properly 1. Use the Finder to navigate to `~/Pictures/` 1. Right click on the `Photo Booth Library` icon and choose _Show Package Contents_. 1. Right click on the `Pictures` folder and choose `Services > Folder Actions Setup` 1. Make sure that the `Twitterpunch` action is attached. 1. Install the folder action 1. Open the `resources` folder of this gem. * Likely to be found in `/Library/Ruby/Gems/{version}/gems/twitterpunch-#{version}/resources/`. 1. Double click on the `Twitterpunch` folder action and install it. * It may claim that it could not be attached, fear not. ### Using something besides PhotoBooth Configure the program you are using for your photo shoot to call Twitterpunch each time it snaps a photo. Pass the name of the new photo as a command line argument. Alternatively, you could batch them, as Twitterpunch can accept multiple files at once. [ben@ganymede] ~ $ twitterpunch photo.jpg [photo2.jpg photo3.jpg photo4.jpg] You can manually install the Folder Action, or you can follow the automated install process after tweaking the workflow slightly. 1. Identify where the app stores the resulting image files. 1. Edit the Twitterpunch folder action to include that path. 1. Follow the steps above to install the Folder Action. ### Viewing the Twitter stream Twitterpunch will run on OS X or Windows equally well. Simply configure it on the computer that will act as the Twitter display and then run in streaming mode. [ben@ganymede] ~ $ twitterpunch --stream There are two modes that Twitterpunch can operate in. 1. If a `:hashtag` is defined then all images tweeted to the configured hashtag will be displayed in the slideshow. 1. Otherwise, Twitterpunch will stream the `:handle` Twitter user's stream and display all images either posted by that user or addressed to that user. With protected tweets, you can have rudimentary access control. In either mode, tweets that come from any other user will also be spoken aloud. If you don't want to use the built-in slideshow viewer, you can disable it by removing the `:viewer` key from your `~/.twitterpunch/config.yaml` config file. Twitterpunch will then simply download the tweeted images and save them into the `:photodir` directory. You can then use anything you like to view them. There are currently two decent viewing options I am aware of. * Windows background image: * Configure the Windows background to randomly cycle through photos in a directory. * Hide desktop icons. * Hide the taskbar. * Disable screensaver and power savings. * Drawbacks: You're using Windows and you have to install Ruby & RubyGems manually. * OS X screensaver: * Choose one of the sexy screensavers and configure it to show photos from the `:photodir` * Set screensaver to a super short timeout. * Disable power savings. * Drawbacks: The screensaver doesn't reload dynamically, so I have to kick it and you'll see it reloading each time a new tweet comes in. Limitations =========== * It currently requires manual setup for Folder Actions. * Rubygame is kind of a pain to set up. Contact ======= * Author: Ben Ford * Email: binford2k@gmail.com * Twitter: @binford2k * IRC (Freenode): binford2k
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