###Installation
If you're using Xcode 6, Swifter can be installed by simply dragging the Swifter Xcode project into your own project and adding either the SwifteriOS or SwifterMac framework as an embedded framework.
###Usage
Swifter can be used with the 3 different kinds of authentication protocols Twitter allows. You can specify which protocol to use as show below.
Instantiation with ACAccount:
let swifter = Swifter(account: twitterAccount)
Instantiation with OAuth:
let swifter = Swifter(consumerKey: "", consumerSecret: "")
Instantiation with App Only Auth:
let swifter = Swifter(consumerKey: "", consumerSecret: "", appOnly: true)
##Example Requests
####OAuth Authorization:
swifter.authorizeWithCallbackURL(callbackURL, success: {
(accessToken: SwifterCredential.OAuthAccessToken?, response: NSURLResponse) in
// ...
},
failure: {
(error: NSError) in
// ...
})
####Get Home Timeline:
swifter.getStatusesHomeTimelineWithCount(20, success: {
(statuses: JSONValue[]?) in
// ...
}, failure: {
(error: NSError) in
// ...
})
####Streaming API:
swifter.getStatusesSampleDelimited(progress: {
(status: Dictionary<String, JSONValue>?) in
// ...
}, stallWarnings: {
(code: String?, message: String?, percentFull: Int?) in
// ...
}, failure: {
(error: NSError) in
// ...
})
####Status Update:
swifter.postStatusUpdate("Hello, world", success: {
(status: Dictionary<String, JSONValue>?) in
// ...
}, failure: {
(error: NSError) in
// ...
})
##JSON Handling
To make accessing data returned by twitter requests, Swifter provides a class for representing JSON which you interact with similarly to a dictionary. The main advantage of using this instead of a Dictionary<String, AnyObject> is that it works better with Swift's strict typing system and doesnt require you to constantly downcast accessed objects. It also removes the need for lots optional chaining, making your code much cleaner and easier to read.
Here's an example of how you would access the text of the first element in list of statuses:
if let statusText = statuses[0]["text"].string {
// ...
}
##OAuth Consumer Tokens
In Twitter REST API v1.1, each client application must authenticate itself with consumer key and consumer secret tokens. You can request consumer tokens for your app on Twitter's website: https://dev.twitter.com/apps.
#License
Swifter is licensed under the MIT License. See the LICENSE file for more information.