I should also note that I used to have the application registered as a
client and would get a verification code when it was like that.  This
app is also registered as a normal app and not as an @Anywhere but
hopefully that doesn't make a difference..

sb

On Jun 23, 1:44 pm, sb <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hi Taylor,
>
> Thanks for getting back to me.  I'm getting something like:
>
> http://example.com/oauthcb.htm?oauth_token=o7QdAbQYgpwAGKk2bR5j6VrARl...
>
> from Twitter.  oauth_token is the same token sent initially during the
> auth request per the spec.  You bring up a good point about the
> callback url and adding state.  I'll address that once this issue is
> resolved.
>
> Neel
>
> On Jun 23, 10:46 am, Taylor Singletary <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
>
>
> > Hi sb,
>
> > I'm surprised that you're not getting the oauth_verifier in the OAuth
> > callback -- do you have an example of the complete callback URL you receive?
>
> > While it shouldn't matter, I do recommend always specifying your
> > oauth_callback, regardless of having a default callback URL specified. It
> > keeps intent clear in your code and most closely adheres to best practices
> > while using OAuth. It also gives you an opportunity to pass some state on
> > your callback URL without having to rely on a session.
>
> > Taylor
>
> > On Wed, Jun 23, 2010 at 7:36 AM, sb <[email protected]> wrote:
> > > Hello,
>
> > > I've recently registered an application with Twitter (normal app - not
> > > @Anywhere) and I intend to use OAuth with it.  I can see the
> > > callback_url is being hit properly, but there is no oauth_verifier
> > > request parameter.  I only see oauth_token.
>
> > > I'm using twitter4j-core-2.1.x to do the heavy lifting of this, and
> > > I'm not specifying a callback url when I request a token since I have
> > > one in the application settings already.  Do I need to specify the
> > > callback URL anyway?
>
> > > Thanks,
>
> > > sb

Reply via email to