A Python bot that automates several actions on Twitter, such as following users and favoriting tweets.
Twitter has started cracking down heavily on users who use bots like this one to follow users or favorite tweets en masse. For that reason, I am no longer developing this code repository but will leave it up for anyone who wants to use it as a code base for future projects. Please respect the software license if you use the code from this repository.
I hold no liability for what you do with this bot or what happens to you by using this bot. Abusing this bot can get you banned from Twitter, so make sure to read up on proper usage of the Twitter API.
You can install the Twitter Follow Bot using pip
:
pip install TwitterFollowBot
You will need to install Python's python-twitter library:
pip install twitter
Although this library should be installed along with the Twitter Follow Bot if you used pip
.
You will also need to create an app account on https://dev.twitter.com/apps
Following these steps will create 4 tokens that you will need to place in the configuration file discussed below.
Before running the bot, you must first set it up so it can connect to the Twitter API. Create a config.txt file and fill in the following information:
OAUTH_TOKEN:
OAUTH_SECRET:
CONSUMER_KEY:
CONSUMER_SECRET:
TWITTER_HANDLE:
ALREADY_FOLLOWED_FILE:already-followed.txt
FOLLOWERS_FILE:followers.txt
FOLLOWS_FILE:following.txt
USERS_KEEP_FOLLOWING:
USERS_KEEP_UNMUTED:
USERS_KEEP_MUTED:
FOLLOW_BACKOFF_MIN_SECONDS:10
FOLLOW_BACKOFF_MAX_SECONDS:60
OAUTH_TOKEN
, OAUTH_SECRET
, CONSUMER_KEY
, CONSUMER_SECRET
are your API keys that you received from creating your app account. TWITTER_HANDLE
is your Twitter name, case-sensitive.
You can change the FILE
entries if you want to store that information in a specific location on your computer. By default, the files will be created in your current directory.
Add comma-separated Twitter user IDs to the USERS_KEEP
entries to:
USERS_KEEP_FOLLOWING
: Keep following these users even if they don't follow you back.
USERS_KEEP_UNMUTED
: Keep these users unmuted (i.e., you receive a mobile notification when they tweet)
USERS_KEEP_MUTED
: Keep these users muted (i.e., you don't receive a mobile notification when they tweet)
For example:
...
FOLLOWS_FILE:following.txt
USERS_KEEP_FOLLOWING:1234,1235,1236
USERS_KEEP_UNMUTED:
...
You can look up a users' Twitter ID here.
To create an instance of the bot:
from TwitterFollowBot import TwitterBot
my_bot = TwitterBot()
By default, the bot will look for a configuration file called config.txt
in your current directory.
If you want to use a different configuration file, pass the configuration file to the bot as follows:
from TwitterFollowBot import TwitterBot
my_bot = TwitterBot("my-other-bot-config.txt")
Note that this allows you to run multiple instances of the bot with different configurations, for example if you run multiple Twitter accounts:
from TwitterFollowBot import TwitterBot
my_bot = TwitterBot()
my_other_bot = TwitterBot("my-other-bot-config.txt")
Due to Twitter API rate limiting, the bot must maintain a local cache of all of your followers so it doesn't use all of your API time looking up your followers. It is highly recommended to sync the bot's local cache daily:
from TwitterFollowBot import TwitterBot
my_bot = TwitterBot()
my_bot.sync_follows()
The bot will create cache files where you specified in the configuration file.
DO NOT delete the cache files ("followers.txt", "follows.txt", and "already-followed.txt" by default) unless you want to start the bot over with a fresh cache.
This bot has several functions for programmatically interacting with Twitter:
from TwitterFollowBot import TwitterBot
my_bot = TwitterBot()
my_bot.auto_follow("phrase")
You can also search based on hashtags:
from TwitterFollowBot import TwitterBot
my_bot = TwitterBot()
my_bot.auto_follow("#hashtag")
By default, the bot looks up the 100 most recent tweets. You can change this number with the count
parameter:
from TwitterFollowBot import TwitterBot
my_bot = TwitterBot()
my_bot.auto_follow("phrase", count=1000)
from TwitterFollowBot import TwitterBot
my_bot = TwitterBot()
my_bot.auto_follow_followers()
from TwitterFollowBot import TwitterBot
my_bot = TwitterBot()
my_bot.auto_follow_followers_of_user("jack", count=1000)
from TwitterFollowBot import TwitterBot
my_bot = TwitterBot()
my_bot.auto_fav("phrase", count=1000)
from TwitterFollowBot import TwitterBot
my_bot = TwitterBot()
my_bot.auto_rt("phrase", count=1000)
from TwitterFollowBot import TwitterBot
my_bot = TwitterBot()
my_bot.auto_unfollow_nonfollowers()
If there are certain users that you would like to not unfollow, add their user id to the USERS_KEEP_FOLLOWING list.
You will need to manually edit the code if you want to add special users that you will keep following even if they don't follow you back.
from TwitterFollowBot import TwitterBot
my_bot = TwitterBot()
my_bot.auto_unfollow_all_followers()
from TwitterFollowBot import TwitterBot
my_bot = TwitterBot()
my_bot.auto_mute_following()
You will need to manually edit the code if you want to add special users that you will not mute.
from TwitterFollowBot import TwitterBot
my_bot = TwitterBot()
my_bot.auto_unmute()
You will need to manually edit the code if you want to add special users that will remain muted.
from TwitterFollowBot import TwitterBot
my_bot = TwitterBot()
my_bot.send_tweet("Hello world!")
from TwitterFollowBot import TwitterBot
my_bot = TwitterBot()
my_bot.auto_add_to_list("#TwitterBot", "twitterbot-list", count=10)
In the example above, the bot will try to add 10 users to the twitterbot-list that are tweeting #TwitterBot.
Remember that the max number of users in a list is 5000.
If you're having issues with or have questions about the bot, file an issue in this repository so one of the project managers can get back to you. Please check the existing (and closed) issues to make sure your issue hasn't already been addressed.