Accessing Twitter Through Javascript
Solution 1:
You can use count
amd max_id
query parameters, but you don't need them.
I also don't think you need or want the callback=?
part.
The key thing: You need to use those OAUTH items to produce an Authorization header, which you must add to the outbound request. The structure of the header is described in Twitter's developer documentation.
To see what the messages look like, go to: https://apigee.com/console/twitter
Thsi is an example of a valid request:
GET /1/statuses/home_timeline.json HTTP/1.1
Authorization: XXXXXXXXX
Host: api.twitter.com
User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (.....)
...where the XXXXXX is the Authorization header, generated according to the oauth 1.0a rules stipulated by Twitter.
It looks like this: (line breaks inserted for readability; this header should be all on one line in the actual request)
OAuth oauth_consumer_key="RR0sePOBbQ8bYdC8r41mg",
oauth_signature_method="HMAC-SHA1",
oauth_timestamp="1341705465",
oauth_nonce="34350",
oauth_version="1.0",
oauth_token="5915213-haTzPfWcr6Ci2gdnD8797AfgRs8AICDK8KIStFtx",
oauth_signature="1hxDP104ZXGMlcblQ05h6vWoJg%3D"
You might want to take advantage of a Javascript OAuth library in order to construct that header, and send the request.
Solution 2:
Apologies for not giving a 1 line answer, but happy to help..
in general when using javascript to fetch data, you won't be able to access many data feeds due to sandbox/'same origin' restrictions..
HOWEVER, sites can approve this ability, but will typically have a particular manner in which they want you to access the data (typically by logging in first, and receiving a session)
Many people have written wrappers around these methods (especially for something as popular as twitter)
have a look at jsOath https://github.com/bytespider/jsOAuth/downloads
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