Confection

Confection collects, stores, and distributes data in a way that's unaffected by client-side disruptions involving cookies, cross-domain scripts, and device IDs. It's also compliant with global privacy laws so it’s good for people too.

Integrate the Confection API with the X (Twitter) API

Setup the Confection API trigger to run a workflow which integrates with the X (Twitter) API. Pipedream's integration platform allows you to integrate Confection and X (Twitter) remarkably fast. Free for developers.

Simple Search with Twitter API on New Event from Confection API
Confection + X (Twitter)
 
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Simple Search with Twitter API on New Field Value from Confection API
Confection + X (Twitter)
 
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Simple Search with Twitter API on New or Updated Leads from Confection API
Confection + X (Twitter)
 
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Add User To List with Twitter API on New Event from Confection API
Confection + X (Twitter)
 
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Add User To List with Twitter API on New Field Value from Confection API
Confection + X (Twitter)
 
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New Event from the Confection API

Emit new event when a UUID receives a value for the configured Event Name. The latest value as well a history of all values ever received for that Event Name will be returned.

 
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New Field Value from the Confection API

Emit new event when the UUID is significant enough to be classified as a lead. You define the field of significance and if a UUID gets a value for this field, it will trigger.

 
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New or Updated Leads from the Confection API

Emit new event when any UUID is created or updated. To learn more about how Confection handles UUIDs, visit https://confection.io/main/demo/#uuid.

 
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New Follower Received by User from the X (Twitter) API

Emit new event when the specified User receives a Follower See the documentation

 
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New List Followed by User from the X (Twitter) API

Emit new event when the specified User follows a List See the documentation

 
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Get Full Details of UUID with the Confection API

This action will retrieve the full details of a specified UUID.

 
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Search Tweets with the X (Twitter) API

Retrieve Tweets from the last seven days that match a query. See the documentation

 
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Get Related UUIDs with the Confection API

This action will retrieve all UUIDs that have a likeness score of at least 50 (default) with the provided UUID. The likeness score can be customized in configuration.

 
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Add User To List with the X (Twitter) API

Add a member to a list owned by the user. See the documentation

 
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Create Tweet with the X (Twitter) API

Create a new tweet. See the documentation

 
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Overview of Confection

Confection API provides a robust solution for collecting, managing, and utilizing user data in compliance with privacy regulations. It helps businesses capture data lost due to ad blockers and privacy tech, ensuring you don't miss out on valuable insights. With Pipedream, you can harness this data in real-time, triggering actions, analyzing trends, or integrating with other services for a comprehensive data strategy.

Connect Confection

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import { axios } from "@pipedream/platform"
export default defineComponent({
  props: {
    confection: {
      type: "app",
      app: "confection",
    }
  },
  async run({steps, $}) {
    const data = {
      "key": `${this.confection.$auth.secret_key}`,
    }
    return await axios($, {
      url: `https://transmission.confection.io/${this.confection.$auth.account_id}/account/`,
      data,
    })
  },
})

Overview of X (Twitter)

The Twitter API on Pipedream enables you to automate interactions with Twitter, from posting tweets to analyzing social media trends. Pipedream's serverless platform provides the tools to create workflows that trigger on specific Twitter activities, process data, and connect with countless other apps for extensive automation scenarios. With Pipedream's integration, you can listen for events such as new tweets, mentions, or followers, and execute actions like tweeting, retweeting, or even leveraging sentiment analysis to gauge public perception.

Connect X (Twitter)

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import { axios } from "@pipedream/platform"
import twitter from "@pipedream/twitter"
export default defineComponent({
  props: {
    twitter
  },
  async run({steps, $}) {
    const config = {
      url: `https://api.twitter.com/2/users/me`,
      params: {
        "user.fields": `created_at,description,entities,id,location,name,pinned_tweet_id,profile_image_url,protected,url,username,verified,withheld`,
        expansions: `pinned_tweet_id`,
      },
    }
    const headers = this.twitter._getAuthHeader(config)
    return await axios($, {
      ...config,
      headers
    })
  },
})
Using Event Sources and Workflows: Analyze Twitter Sentiment in Real-Time and Save to Google Sheets
Using Event Sources and Workflows: Analyze Twitter Sentiment in Real-Time and Save to Google Sheets
Learn how you can use Pipedream event sources and serverless workflows to listen for new Twitter mentions, analyze the sentiment of each Tweet using the npm sentiment package (https://www.npmjs.com/package/sentiment), and then save that data to Google Sheets in real-time.
Entering Data in Params Forms
Entering Data in Params Forms
Learn about the new model to enter expressions and reference previous step exports in params forms.
Managing the Concurrency and Execution Rate of Workflow Events
Managing the Concurrency and Execution Rate of Workflow Events
Managing the Concurrency and Execution Rate of Workflow Events.

Community Posts

A Look at Pipedream
A Look at Pipedream
I'm going to build a workflow that will search Twitter every hour for a keyword. It will take the results, format them nicely, and then email it.
Building a Google Sheets Twitter Bot with Pipedream
Building a Google Sheets Twitter Bot with Pipedream
This is something that's been kicking around my head for a week or so and today I thought I'd try it. It ended up taking about 20 minutes total and 10 lines of code, of which 5 are a function I copied and pasted. While what I built is kind of trivial, I'm blown away by how much was done by built-in functions with Pipedream and how little work I had to do myself. In fact, most of my time was spent in setting stuff up outside of Pipedream itself. Alright, so what did I build?
Building a Twitter Bot in Pipedream
Building a Twitter Bot in Pipedream
I did this by parsing information from the GI Joe wikipedia site and implementing it on Pipedream's platform. I'm going to share how I built it, but be aware that roughly 95% of the work was involved in getting my random character. The aspects that pertain to Pipedream were incredibly simple - which is what you want in a platform.
Using State in Pipedream Workflows
Using State in Pipedream Workflows
I did this by parsing information from the GI Joe wikipedia site and implementing it on Pipedream's platform. I'm going to share how I built it, but be aware that roughly 95% of the work was involved in getting my random character. The aspects that pertain to Pipedream were incredibly simple - which is what you want in a platform.
Building a Twitter Scheduling System with Pipedream and Google Sheets
Building a Twitter Scheduling System with Pipedream and Google Sheets
A few months ago, I blogged about how I used Pipedream and Google Sheets to create a Twitter bot. The idea was simple - read a sheet - select a random row - and use that as the source of a new Tweet. I was thinking about this recently and how useful Google Sheets can be as a "light weight CMS" and figured out another interesting use case - Twitter scheduling.
A demo of using the Twitter API, via Pipedream, to render the images from a Twitter account.