TWITMAIL(1) User Contributed Perl Documentation TWITMAIL(1)NAMEtwitmail - Because some tweets you just can't afford to miss
SYNOPSIS
Curses Interface
Simply run "twitmail" and fill out the preferences and get started!
Command Line
Or you can use the command line interface:
Read new twits:
# twitmail-l
---- friends ---------------------------------------------------------
01 Tue 18:33 airsax woohoo finally my DSP board plays nice with my
macbook!!! i've spent on and off the last 3
or 4 weeks working on this!
02 18:38 canusis how does it always get to be 7pm, and I haven't
even gotten started on any work yet?
tomorrow won't be any better, meetings from
11-5.
03 19:10 andrewsf After 4 crashes in 5 minutes, I'm wondering if
paper would be a more productive
alterrnative to Microsoft Word.
Update your status:
# twitmail-u is writing documentation for twitmail
Reply to an existing post (#3 ... @NAME is auto-added):
# twitmail-r 3 Maybe you should write your paper in tweets
Check for new updates (note how replies to me (@hardaker) are singled
out):
# twitmail---- replies ------------------------------------------------------
01 Tue 20:13 jasonsalas @hardaker here's that @metajack post about
bot design...good stuff! http://is.gd/bzDV
---- friends ------------------------------------------------------
02 Tue 20:24 hardaker @andrewsf Maybe you should write your paper
in tweets
DESCRIPTIONtwitmail implementas a "mail-like" interface to twitter. In
particular, it presents it's data in a mail-reader like iterface where
incoming tweets are represented as "new" when you haven't read them.
It provides "reply" and "forward" actions so you can reply and retweet
to the things you're staring at. Tweets are kept locally in your local
database so searching through past tweets is easy with it's search
facility. And most importantly, it tries to collect "all the tweets
since the last time you read it", unlike the web interfaces that only
show you the last 20 or so. It's designed so you never miss those
important tweets from friends!
To get started, simply run "twitmail" and it'll throw you into the
configuration section where you can fill out your twitter account
information and a few other settings. Save the settings and you'll be
placed into the reading interface with a few "help" tweets in it.
There is a "help" line at the bottom of the page that shows you some of
the key bindings. The ">" key will rotate through showing these
helpful keybinds.
twitmail also provides a command-line client to keep track of tweets
that have occured. Yes, I have fancy graphical clients to do that too.
But, most of them don't easily show replies to my previous mesasges
without scrolling back a ways. Especially when I've been gone for 3
days. So, twitmail was designed to accomodate that need and just print
a quick summary of tweets that have arrived.
OPTIONS (commnad line usage only)-a Shows all messages, not just the most recent.
-m MODES
MODES is a comma separated list of things to show:
replies
Replies sent to you
friends
Updates from friends
public
Show updates from all the world.
The default value is friends,replies
-u MESSAGE
Updates your twitter status to MESSAGE
-r NUM MESSAGE
Replies to a particular message NUM. A @user prefix will
automatically be added so all you need is the message number (the
left most column in the output).
-f USER
Follows a particular USER. Doesn't seem to work yet.
-S Tells twitmail not to save the configuration again. In particular,
this means that it will not remember you've just read the messages
you've read and you'll see them again next time.
-n COUNT
Only displays COUNT messages.
(has an issue with some modes)
TODO
Things on the todo list:
- Make replies indented and next to other messages
- Detect that not enough messages could be retrieved and realize you
skipped some.
AUTHOR
Wes Hardaker <hardaker ATAT users.sourceforge.net>
AKA "hardaker" on twitter.com, IRC, and other places
perl v5.20.2 2009-08-21 TWITMAIL(1)