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rtweet (version 1.2.1)

get_favorites: Get tweets liked/favorited by one or more users

Description

Returns up to 3,000 tweets liked/favorited for each user.

Usage

get_favorites(
  user,
  n = 200,
  since_id = NULL,
  max_id = NULL,
  parse = TRUE,
  retryonratelimit = NULL,
  verbose = TRUE,
  token = NULL
)

Value

A tibble with one row for each tweet.

Arguments

user

Character vector of screen names or user ids. See as_screenname() for more details.

n

Desired number of results to return. Results are downloaded in pages when n is large; the default value will download a single page. Set n = Inf to download as many results as possible.

The Twitter API rate limits the number of requests you can perform in each 15 minute period. The easiest way to download more than that is to use retryonratelimit = TRUE.

You are not guaranteed to get exactly n results back. You will get fewer results when tweets have been deleted or if you hit a rate limit. You will get more results if you ask for a number of tweets that's not a multiple of page size, e.g. if you request n = 150 and the page size is 200, you'll get 200 results back.

since_id

Supply a vector of ids or a data frame of previous results to find tweets newer than since_id.

max_id

Supply a vector of ids or a data frame of previous results to find tweets older than max_id.

parse

If TRUE, the default, returns a tidy data frame. Use FALSE to return the "raw" list corresponding to the JSON returned from the Twitter API.

retryonratelimit

If TRUE, and a rate limit is exhausted, will wait until it refreshes. Most Twitter rate limits refresh every 15 minutes. If FALSE, and the rate limit is exceeded, the function will terminate early with a warning; you'll still get back all results received up to that point. The default value, NULL, consults the option rtweet.retryonratelimit so that you can globally set it to TRUE, if desired.

If you expect a query to take hours or days to perform, you should not rely solely on retryonratelimit because it does not handle other common failure modes like temporarily losing your internet connection.

verbose

Show progress bars and other messages indicating current progress?

token

Use this to override authentication for a single API call. In many cases you are better off changing the default for all calls. See auth_as() for details.

References

https://developer.twitter.com/en/docs/twitter-api/v1/tweets/post-and-engage/api-reference/get-favorites-list

See Also

Other tweets: get_mentions(), get_timeline(), lists_statuses(), lookup_tweets(), search_tweets()

Examples

Run this code
if (auth_has_default()) {
# get likes for a single user
kfc <- get_favorites("KFC")
kfc
# get newer likes since last request
newer <- get_favorites("KFC", since_id = kfc)

# get likes from multiple users
favs <- get_favorites(c("Lesdoggg", "pattonoswalt", "meganamram"))
favs
}

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