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First of all, you need to install scribe. You either download the jar manually from the downloads page and include apache commons codec, or just let maven take care of everything adding this to your pom.xml file:
<dependency>
<groupId>org.scribe</groupId>
<artifactId>scribe</artifactId>
<version>1.3.2</version> // please use always the latest version
</dependency>
The example uses OOB OAuth, if you want to pass a callbackUrl so that Twitter redirects you there just add
a callback("http://your_callback_url") call before build()
Step Two: Get the request token
TokenrequestToken = service.getRequestToken()
Easy right?
Step Three: Making the user validate your request token
Let’s help your users authorize your app to do the OAuth calls.
For this you need to redirect them to the following URL:
After this either the user will get a verifier code (if this is an OOB request) or you’ll receive a redirect from Twitter with the verifier and the requestToken on it (if you provided a callbackUrl)
Step Four: Get the access Token
Now that you have (somehow) the verifier, you need to exchange your requestToken and verifier for an accessToken which is the one used to sign requests.
Verifierv = newVerifier("verifier you got from the user");
TokenaccessToken = service.getAccessToken(requestToken, v); // the requestToken you had from step 2
Step Five: Sign request
You are all set to make your first API call, so let’s do it!
OAuthRequestrequest = newOAuthRequest(Verb.GET, "http://api.twitter.com/1/account/verify_credentials.xml");
service.signRequest(accessToken, request); // the access token from step 4Responseresponse = request.send();
System.out.println(response.getBody());
That’s it! You already know everything you need to start building a cool OAuth application.