User:Jonas Lund/In-Search-Of-Lost-Time/get twitter token

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< User:Jonas Lund‎ | In-Search-Of-Lost-Time
Revision as of 13:59, 23 October 2011 by Jonas Lund (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<source lang="python"> import urlparse import oauth2 as oauth consumer_key='' consumer_secret='' request_token_url='https://api.twitter.com/oauth/request_token' access_token_url...")
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import urlparse
import oauth2 as oauth

consumer_key=''
consumer_secret=''
request_token_url='https://api.twitter.com/oauth/request_token'
access_token_url='https://api.twitter.com/oauth/access_token'
authorize_url='https://api.twitter.com/oauth/authorize'

consumer=oauth.Consumer(consumer_key,consumer_secret)
client=oauth.Client(consumer)
resp, content = client.request(request_token_url, "GET")

if resp['status'] != '200':
    raise Exception("Invalid response %s." % resp['status'])

request_token = dict(urlparse.parse_qsl(content))

print "Request Token:"
print "    - oauth_token        = %s" % request_token['oauth_token']
print "    - oauth_token_secret = %s" % request_token['oauth_token_secret']
print 

# Step 2: Redirect to the provider. Since this is a CLI script we do not
# redirect. In a web application you would redirect the user to the URL
# below.

print "Go to the following link in your browser:"
print "%s?oauth_token=%s" % (authorize_url, request_token['oauth_token'])

# After the user has granted access to you, the consumer, the provider will
# redirect you to whatever URL you have told them to redirect to. You can
# usually define this in the oauth_callback argument as well.
accepted = 'n'
while accepted.lower() == 'n':
    accepted = raw_input('Have you authorized me? (y/n) ')

oauth_verifier = raw_input('What is the PIN? ')

# Step 3: Once the consumer has redirected the user back to the oauth_callback
# URL you can request the access token the user has approved. You use the
# request token to sign this request. After this is done you throw away the
# request token and use the access token returned. You should store this
# access token somewhere safe, like a database, for future use.
token = oauth.Token(request_token['oauth_token'],request_token['oauth_token_secret'])

token.set_verifier(oauth_verifier)
client = oauth.Client(consumer, token)

resp, content = client.request(access_token_url, "POST")
access_token = dict(urlparse.parse_qsl(content))

#print "Access Token:"
print access_token.keys() # Save the output of the script which gives the access token
print access_token.values()
print "You may now access protected resources using the access tokens above."