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108

answers:

1

I have tried many different way and search all over the internet to find a tutorial to use JTwitter with OAuth. Here are the following step I have accomplish

Download both Jtwitter and Signpost Add them as Jars in the Java Builder

Created a simple button that run

public class ShareGenerator extends Activity {

    private static final String JTWITTER_OAUTH_KEY = "this_is_populated";
    private static final String JTWITTER_OAUTH_SECRET = "this_is_populated";

    Button menupopButton;

     @Override
        public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
      super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
  setContentView(R.layout.share);
  this.setContentView(R.layout.share);
  this.txShare = (TextView)this.findViewById(R.id.lblshare);
  this.menupopButton = (Button)this.findViewById(R.id.menupop);


  menupopButton.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener()
  { 
      public void onClick(View v) 

      {
          TwitterSend();

      } 
 }); 

     }

and I have my class

public void TwitterSend () {

                 OAuthSignpostClient client = new OAuthSignpostClient(JTWITTER_OAUTH_KEY, JTWITTER_OAUTH_SECRET, "oob");
                    Twitter jtwit = new Twitter("bob", client);
                    // open the authorisation page in the user's browser
                    client.authorizeDesktop();
                    // get the pin
                    String v = client.askUser("Please enter the verification PIN from Twitter");
                    client.setAuthorizationCode(v);
                    // Optional: store the authorisation token details
                    Object accessToken = client.getAccessToken();
                    // use the API!
                    jtwit.setStatus("Messing about in Java");

             }

However I can't even get the OAuth screen to pop up. It crashes when it get there. Can anyone help me at least see the OAuth screen? I do have the import set correctly.

+1  A: 

The problem is in this line, which uses java.awt.Desktop:

// open the authorisation page in the user's browser
client.authorizeDesktop();

That will work on a desktop PC, but not on Android.

Instead, take the url from client.authorizeUrl(); and send the user there. E.g. with something like this:

URI url = client.authorizeUrl();
Intent myIntent = new Intent(Intent.VIEW_ACTION);
myIntent.setData(url);
startActivity(myIntent);

But I'm not an Android coder! You can almost certainly do better by using a callback instead of oob. Hopefully someone else can supply the code for that...

Daniel Winterstein