.. _basic-usage: Basic Usage =========== This section will cover how to use Twython and interact with some basic Twitter API calls Before you make any API calls, make sure you :ref:`authenticated ` the user! .. note:: All sections on this page will assume you're using a Twython instance ******************************************************************************* Authenticated Calls ------------------- OAuth 1 ~~~~~~~ Create a Twython instance with your application keys and the users OAuth tokens:: from twython import Twython twitter = Twython(APP_KEY, APP_SECRET OAUTH_TOKEN, OAUTH_TOKEN_SECRET) User Information ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Documentation: https://dev.twitter.com/docs/api/1.1/get/account/verify_credentials :: twitter.verify_credentials() Authenticated Users Home Timeline ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Documentation: https://dev.twitter.com/docs/api/1.1/get/statuses/home_timeline :: twitter.get_home_timeline() Updating Status ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ This method makes use of dynamic arguments, :ref:`read more about them ` Documentation: https://dev.twitter.com/docs/api/1/post/statuses/update :: twitter.update_status(status='See how easy using Twython is!') OAuth 2 ~~~~~~~ Create a Twython instance with your application key and access token:: from twython import Twython twitter = Twython(APP_KEY, access_token=ACCESS_TOKEN) .. _howtosearch: Searching --------- .. note:: Searching can be done whether you're authenticated via OAuth 1 or OAuth 2 Documentation: https://dev.twitter.com/docs/api/1.1/get/search/tweets :: twitter.search(q='python') .. _dynamicargexplaination: .. important:: To help explain :ref:`dynamic function arguments ` a little more, you can see that the previous call used the keyword argument ``q``, that is because Twitter specifies in their `search documentation `_ that the search call accepts the parameter "q". You can pass mutiple keyword arguments. The search documentation also specifies that the call accepts the parameter "result_type" :: twitter.search(q='python', result_type='popular')