Hi Talyor, Thanks for your input. It helped. :)
And now I can cache the data (oauth_token_secret and oauth_token) to avoid multiple authorizations. -Gaurav www.mastergaurav.com On Jul 28, 8:03 pm, Taylor Singletary <taylorsinglet...@twitter.com> wrote: > Hi Gaurav, > > Once you've gone through all the steps of OAuth and have acquired an access > token (made up of an oauth_token and oauth_token_secret), you can then > persist the access token in whatever means of storage your application uses. > Then, when making an API call on behalf of a Twitter user for whom you've > acquired an access token, you use your stored tokens instead of > renegotiating for them. > > How to instantiate your OAuth stack's Access Token is different from library > to library, but there are some tips that apply here:http://bit.ly/1token > > Taylor > > On Wed, Jul 28, 2010 at 3:35 AM, Gaurav Vaish <gaurav.va...@gmail.com>wrote: > > > Hi, > > > Using Twitter4J API, I have been able to successfully fetch the data > > and perform an status update using OAuth. > > > Here are the results:http://twitter.com/mastergaurav/status/19730194057 > > (Positive Results) > > > Problem -- > > Once a user grants access to the user, how can I reuse the "granted > > access" permission over and over again? > > > Currently, I use Customer Key and Secret to get "OAuth Request > > Token" (by first hittinghttps://twitter.com/oauth/request_token) > > > And I would not like to hit it over and over again for the same user > > (until the permissions are revoked). > > > How can I achieve the same... > > > -Gaurav