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This is a bootstrap for setting up a simple Twitter bot with Node.js using the npm twit
module. The bot will retweet what you specify when configuring it. It will also reply to followers with a selection of canned responses.
As a primer for this, there is a great post by @amanhimself on making your own twitter bot, check it out in the Links section. This is an expansion on that with further detail on configuration and deployment with now
from Zeit.
Before starting the clock you'll need to set up some accounts if you don't have them already.
- Twitter account
- Development environment with Node.js and npm
- Zeit account
Set up an application on the Twitter account you want to retweet from via: https://apps.twitter.com/app/new
As an example, I'll configure the old @DroidScott twitter account I have so you can follow along.
Straight forward enough for the twitter application, make sure you add your phone number to your Twitter account before clicking the Create your Twitter application button.
You should now be in the 'Application Management' section where you will need to take note of your keys. You should have your 'Consumer Key (API Key)' and 'Consumer Secret (API Secret)' already available. You'll need to scroll to the bottom of the page and click the Create my access token to get the 'Access Token' and 'Access Token Secret' take note of all four of them as you'll need them when setting up the bot.
If you don't already have a dev environment with node installed then for a quick-start I'd suggest using Cloud9 you can be up and running in minutes with one of the pre made Node.js environments.
Note that in some regions you will be prompted to enter credit card information to use Cloud9 you will not be charged, there are other options to use like Glitch if you don't have a credit card. For this guide I'm going to be using Cloud9 which is what will be in the images.
If you're using a c9 environment then you'll need to upgrade node
which I think comes pre-installed at version 6 which will cause some errors with the code in this repository, so we're going to go with version 8 for this, so, in the terminal:
nvm install 8 # install node 8
nvm use 8 # set it to use node 8
nvm alias default 8 # default to 8 so version persists after reboots
nvm
stands for Node Version Manager which comes installed by default on c9 machines 👍
In the project tree for the default c9 node application delete the example project files of client
, node_modules
, package.json
, README.md
and server.js
. You won't need them, but you can leave them there if you so desire.
In your new Node.js c9 environment go to the terminal and enter:
git clone https://github.com/spences10/twitter-bot-bootstrap
The environment project tree will look something like this:
twitter-bot-bootstrap/
├─ images
├─ node_modules/
├─ src/
│ ├─ api
│ │ ├─ reply.js
│ │ └─ retweet.js
│ ├─ bot.js
│ ├─ config.js
│ └─ rando.js
├─ .env
├─ .gitignore
├─ .snyk
├─ CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md
├─ CONTRIBUTING.md
├─ LICENSE
├─ README.md
├─ index.js
├─ package-lock.json
└─ package.json
Before configuring the bot we'll need to install the dependencies, cd into the project folder with cd tw*
in the terminal this will move you to :~/workspace/twitter-bot-bootstrap (master) $
from the terminal enter:
npm install
This will install all the dependencies listed in the package.json
file.
If you get an errors then I suggest installing the dependencies one by one from the package.json
file with the same command and the package name at the end:
Here is an example of the dependencies
in the package,json
file:
"dependencies": {
"dotenv": "4.0.0",
"snyk": "1.31.0",
"twit": "2.2.5",
"unique-random-array": "1.0.0"
}
The npm command to install them all:
npm install --save dotenv twit unique-random-array snyk
Now you can configure the bot. From the terminal enter:
npm init
This will configure the package.json
file with your details as desired. Just keep hitting return if you're happy with the defaults.
Make a .env
file: make a file named .env
do it with the terminal with the following command:
touch .env
This should be at the root of your project directory.
Now you'll need to add your Twitter keys to the .env
file. Just input the keys in their corresponding fields and save the file.
The file structure should look as follows:
TWITTER_CONSUMER_KEY=
TWITTER_CONSUMER_SECRET=
TWITTER_ACCESS_TOKEN=
TWITTER_ACCESS_TOKEN_SECRET=
QUERY_STRING=my super awesome query string!,google,android
RANDOM_REPLY=Hi @${screenName} thanks for the follow! What are you working on today?|@${screenName} thanks for following! What are you working on today?
RESULT_TYPE=mixed
TWITTER_LANG=en
TWITTER_RETWEET_RATE=.1
TWITTER_SEARCH_COUNT=20
Note that RANDOM_REPLY
is split with a pipe |
and the QUERY_STRING
is split by a comma ,
this is so that RANDOM_REPLY
can have a comma in the reply text.
If you can not find the .env
file in the file structure of your c9 project then you will need to enable the Show Hidden Files
option. In the file view select the settings cog then tick the Show Hidden Files
option if it is not already checked.
Add your API keys to the .env
file 🔑
The .env
file is where we can configure our bot, here we set what we want to search on, check out the twitter-bot-playground
for information on Twitter search.
QUERY_STRING
should be what you want to retweet tweets on with the search terms separated with commas. RANDOM_REPLY
again is comma separated replies with the ${ScreenName} which is replaced when replying to the follower. TWITTER_RETWEET_RATE
is in minutes.
NOTE none of the
.env
items have quotes''
round them or spaces between the key and the valueKEY=value
TWITTER_CONSUMER_KEY=Fw***********P9
TWITTER_CONSUMER_SECRET=TD************Cq
TWITTER_ACCESS_TOKEN=31**************UC
TWITTER_ACCESS_TOKEN_SECRET=r0************S2
QUERY_STRING=mango,horses,"donald -trump -duck"
RANDOM_REPLY=Hi @${screenName} thanks for the follow! What are you working on today?,@${screenName} thanks for following! What are you working on today?
RESULT_TYPE=mixed
TWITTER_LANG=en
TWITTER_RETWEET_RATE=120
TWITTER_SEARCH_COUNT=20
That should be it. Go to the terminal, enter npm start
and you should get some output:
Check the Twitter account:
You now have a tweet bot, if you want to have this deployed so it's not just running from your machine or from the c9 machine [which is against their terms of service] then we can go over that next.
Got your Zeit account set up? Now is the time if not, then install now
from the terminal:
npm i -g now
Then now
from the terminal and you will be prompted to enter your email, you will be sent a confirmation email, click the link and you're ready to go!
If you take a look at the package.json
file in the "scripts"
section you see there is one for "deploy"
this is the command to deploy the bot to now
, so from the terminal:
npm run deploy
This will use all our environment variables we defined within our .env
file for use on the now servers.
You will get terminal output with a URL for where your bot is located, click the link and you can watch it get built.
If you want to add this to your own GitHub repo and don't want to share your API keys 🔑 with the world then you should turn off tracking on the .env
file. From the terminal enter this git command:
git update-index --assume-unchanged .env
I have added my most used git commands I use in this repo I use it on a daily basis, please feel free to use it.
Credit for the inspiration for this should go to @amanhimself and his posts on creating your own twitter bot.
MIT License
Copyright (c) 2017, Scott Spence. All rights reserved.