![Twitter Advanced Search Twitter Advanced Search](/uploads/1/1/7/8/117802777/596687158.jpg)
Building standard queries
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Standard
![Tweets Tweets](/uploads/1/1/7/8/117802777/468451992.jpg)
The best way to build a standard query and test if it’s valid and will return matched Tweets is to first try it at twitter.com/search. As you get a satisfactory result set, the URL loaded in the browser will contain the proper query syntax that can be reused in the standard search API endpoint. Here’s an example:
- We want to search for Tweets referencing @TwitterDev account. First, we run the search on twitter.com/search
- Check and copy the URL loaded. In this case, we got: https://twitter.com/search?q=%40twitterdev
- Replace https://twitter.com/search with https://api.twitter.com/1.1/search/tweets.json and you will get: https://api.twitter.com/1.1/search/tweets.json?q=%40twitterdev
- Run a Twurl command to execute the search.
Please note that the API requires that the request be authenticated (check Authentication & Authorization documentation for more details on this). Note that the standard search API only serves data from the last week. If you need historical data odler than seven days, check out the premium and enterprise search APIs.
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Standard search operators
The query can have operators that modify its behavior. the available operators are:
Operator | Finds Tweets.. |
---|---|
watching now | containing both “watching” and “now”. This is the default operator. |
“happy hour” | containing the exact phrase “happy hour”. |
love OR hate | containing either “love” or “hate” (or both). |
beer -root | containing “beer” but not “root”. |
#haiku | containing the hashtag “haiku”. |
from:interior | sent from Twitter account “interior”. |
list:NASA/astronauts-in-space-now | sent from a Twitter account in the NASA list astronauts-in-space-now |
to:NASA | a Tweet authored in reply to Twitter account “NASA”. |
@NASA | mentioning Twitter account “NASA”. |
politics filter:safe | containing “politics” with Tweets marked as potentially sensitive removed. |
puppy filter:media | containing “puppy” and an image or video. |
puppy -filter:retweets | containing “puppy”, filtering out retweets |
puppy filter:native_video | containing “puppy” and an uploaded video, Amplify video, Periscope, or Vine. |
puppy filter:periscope | containing “puppy” and a Periscope video URL. |
puppy filter:vine | containing “puppy” and a Vine. |
puppy filter:images | containing “puppy” and links identified as photos, including third parties such as Instagram. |
puppy filter:twimg | containing “puppy” and a pic.twitter.com link representing one or more photos. |
hilarious filter:links | containing “hilarious” and linking to URL. |
puppy url:amazon | containing “puppy” and a URL with the word “amazon” anywhere within it. |
superhero since:2015-12-21 | containing “superhero” and sent since date “2015-12-21” (year-month-day). |
puppy until:2015-12-21 | containing “puppy” and sent before the date “2015-12-21”. |
movie -scary :) | containing “movie”, but not “scary”, and with a positive attitude. |
flight :( | containing “flight” and with a negative attitude. |
traffic ? | containing “traffic” and asking a question. |
Please, make sure to URL encode these queries before making the request. There are several online tools to help you to do that, or you can search at twitter.com/search and copy the encoded URL from the browser’s address bar. The table below shows some example mappings from search queries to URL encoded queries:
Search query | URL encoded query |
---|---|
#haiku #poetry | %23haiku+%23poetry |
“happy hour” :) | %22happy%20hour%22%20%3A%29 |
Note that the space character can be represented by “%20” or “+” sign.
Additional parameters
There is a set of additional parameters that allows a better control of the search results. Ps4 with remote. The GET search/tweets documentation has detailed information about the usage of the parameters, this section will only give a brief description of their capabilities:
- Result Type: just like twitter.com/search results, the result_type parameter selects whether the result set will be represented by recent or popular Tweets, or even a mix of both.
- Geolocalization: the search operator “near” isn’t available in the API, but there is a more precise way to restrict your query by a given location using the geocode parameter specified with the template “latitude,longitude,radius”, for example, “37.781157,-122.398720,1mi”. When conducting geo searches, the search API will first attempt to find Tweets which have lat/long within the queried geocode, and in case of not having success, it will attempt to find Tweets created by users whose profile location can be reverse geocoded into a lat/long within the queried geocode, meaning that is possible to receive Tweets which do not include lat/long information.
- Language: the lang parameter restricts Tweets to the given language.
- Iterating in a result set: parameters such count, until, since_id, max_id control iteration through search results, since it could be a large set of Tweets. The Working with Timelines documentation is a rich and illustrative tutorial to learn how to use these parameters to achieve the best efficiency and reliability when processing result sets.
How to refine your advanced search
Using advanced search, you can refine your search results by using any combination of the fields below:
Words
- Tweets containing all words in any position (“Twitter” and “search”)
- Tweets containing exact phrases (“Twitter search”)
- Tweets containing any of the words (“Twitter” or “search”)
- Tweets excluding specific words (“Twitter” but not “search”)
- Tweets with a specific hashtag (#twitter)
- Tweets in a specific language (written in English)
People
- Tweets from a specific account (Tweeted by “@TwitterComms”)
- Tweets sent as replies to a specific account (in reply to “@TwitterComms”)
- Tweets that mention a specific account (Tweet includes “@TwitterComms”)
Twitter Advanced Search Api
Places
Twitter Advanced Search Ios
- Tweets sent from a geographic location, e.g. a specific city, state, country
- Use the place dropdown to select the geographic location
Dates
Twitter Advanced Search Feature
- Tweets sent before a specific date, after a specific date or within a date range
- Use the calendar dropdown to select a “from” date, “to” date or both
- Search for Tweets from any date since the first public Tweet
Twitter Advanced Search Not Working
By combining fields in advanced search, you can tailor your search results in a powerful way. For example, if you’re looking for an old Tweet you sent about what you did on New Year's day, you can search for Tweets containing “New Years” but excluding “Resolution” between December 30, 2013 and January 2, 2014. You can also search for Tweets in English by using the hashtag. For example, “#WorldCup” sent from Brazil in July 2014 will show you Tweets about the world cup that year.
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