@Ed
I think that ought to work as well. I did try doing something like
that, however I hit a dead end because I kept getting cached results
on querying search. (see topic:
http://groups.google.com/group/twitter-development-talk/browse_thread/thread/7a022ad241e44ab3#)
Has anyone else had any succes
search.twitter.com/search.atom?geocode=19.017656%2C72.856178%2.>
> ?
>
> -aj
>
>
>
>
>
> On Tue, Dec 1, 2009 at 8:49 PM, enygmatic wrote:
> > Hi, Raffi
> > Were you able to raise the cache issue with the search team?
> > Seems the problem is worse than I tho
do this at the moment,
> > which kind of defeats my purpose as I need to the deploy the script in
> > the next one week or so. Guess I'll have to live with the stale
> > results...
>
> > Anyway thanks for the help.
>
> > On Nov 28, 12:40 am, Abraham Will
again. The
> question for the search team is how to have your query treated as an
> "important" one without abusing the API.
>
> Diego
>
> Diego
>
> On Nov 28, 1:18 pm, enygmatic wrote:
>
> > I got some requests to post the query that I am using:
> &
I got some requests to post the query that I am using:
here is the query :
http://search.twitter.com/search.atom?geocode=19.017656%2C72.856178%2C15.0mi&rpp=25
Do correct me if I am not querying or using the API correctly. (Should
have been my first question actually :) )
Also here is a sample of t
to the deploy the script in
> > the next one week or so. Guess I'll have to live with the stale
> > results...
>
> > Anyway thanks for the help.
>
> > On Nov 28, 12:40 am, Abraham Williams <4bra...@gmail.com> wrote:
> >> On Fri, Nov 27, 2009 at 1
the help.
On Nov 28, 12:40 am, Abraham Williams <4bra...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Fri, Nov 27, 2009 at 12:38, enygmatic wrote:
> > From what I have
> > gone through so far, there doesn't seem to be a way to query for
> > status updates from a certain geographical location
@Raffi, thanks for the reply. I now convert the time from UTC to my
local time zone, so my time zone problem is sorted out. On the issue
of search, been going through the streaming api docs. From what I have
gone through so far, there doesn't seem to be a way to query for
status updates from a cert
@Raffi,
Thanks for the info.
Just a couple of queries: I'm using the Atom format for search results
(As mentioned on
http://apiwiki.twitter.com/Twitter-Search-API-Method%3A-search).
I get the published date in the atom feed. So I am not sure what you
mean by "created_at":"Fri, 27 Nov 2009 00:06:44
I have been using the Twitter Search API to query the public line for
Twitter status updates originating out of a particular location.
Currently, I run one search every 15 minutes using an automated
script. However I have found that the search results returned contain
a number of old search results
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