I do most of my Twitter API development in Perl, with some of it in Ruby. I use Komodo IDE for that. http://www.activestate.com/komodo/
The Perl Net::Twitter library: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Net-Twitter/ The Ruby "tweetstream" gem: http://intridea.com/2009/9/22/tweetstream-ruby-access-to-the-twitter-streaming-api PostgreSQL as a database for large collections of tweets: http://www.postgresql.org/ and of course, my own appliance, sm...@znmeb: http://borasky-research.net/2009/10/26/coming-soon-smartznmeb-0-5/ On Sat, Jan 30, 2010 at 11:55 AM, Abraham Williams <4bra...@gmail.com> wrote: > Lets collect an awesome list of tools and applications we use to help > develop with the Twitter API. > I'll start the list with a couple that I use: > Charles Proxy - @charlesproxy - http://www.charlesproxy.com/ > Charles is an HTTP proxy / HTTP monitor / Reverse Proxy that enables a > developer to view all of the HTTP and SSL / HTTPS traffic between their > machine and the Internet. This includes requests, responses and the HTTP > headers (which contain the cookies and caching information) > Hurl - @hurlit - http://hurl.it/ > Hurl makes HTTP requests. Enter a URL, set some headers, view the response, > then share it with others. Perfect for demoing and debugging APIs. > Hurl is also open source - http://defunkt.github.com/hurl/ > TwitterOAuth PHP Library - > @oauthlib - http://github.com/abraham/twitteroauth > The first PHP Library to support OAuth for Twitter's REST API. > MIT licensed. > GitHub - @github - https://github.com/ > GitHub is the easiest (and prettiest) way to participate in that > collaboration: fork projects, send pull requests, monitor development, all > with ease. > What tools do you use while developing with the Twitter API? > -- > Abraham Williams | Community Advocate | http://abrah.am > Project | Out Loud | http://outloud.labs.poseurtech.com > This email is: [ ] shareable [x] ask first [ ] private. > Sent from Seattle, WA, United States -- M. Edward (Ed) Borasky http://borasky-research.net "I've always regarded nature as the clothing of God." ~Alan Hovhaness