Have a look at the Streaming API. [1] You can open a connection and count
through every thousand results.

Abraham

[1] http://apiwiki.twitter.com/Streaming-API-Documentation

On Mon, Mar 1, 2010 at 04:17, enes akar <enesa...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Hello;
> I want to find when the publish time of 1000th tweet that contains word
> 'love'. So I make the following query.
>
> http://search.twitter.com/search.atom?rpp=1&page=1000&q=love
>
> But the results are instable.
> Sometimes, the result is the tweet that is just 10 minutes ago from now.
> (this result is logical)
> Sometimes, the result is the tweet that is 7-8 hours ago from now. (this is
> not logical)
>
> I tried to use max_id to fix the results.
> But again for different max_id, the interval between published_time are
> very instable.
>
> Are not the search results ordered by published time?
>
> Extra note, I see this problem only the words with heavy usage like 'love',
> 'yes'.
> Search queries for specisific searches are stable and logical.
>
> --
> Enes Akar
> http://www.linkedin.com/pub/enes-akar/7/835/3aa
>



-- 
Abraham Williams | Community Advocate | http://abrah.am
TwitterOAuth | http://github.com/abraham/twitteroauth
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