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In this example we write some Ruby to publish a Tweet with the assumption that you have no prior experience of doing so, nor knowledge of what 3rd party Ruby Gems or code snippets can be used.

We assume you have (created) a Twitter account and that you're somewhat familiar with Ruby, Ruby gems, Bundler, etc. Oh yeah, and that GitHub Copilot is installed :)

Setup:

Before you start, create a new read+write app on the Twitter Developer Portal and keep a note of the following values:

  • TWITTER_CONSUMER_KEY
  • TWITTER_CONSUMER_SECRET
  • TWITTER_ACCESS_TOKEN
  • TWITTER_ACCESS_TOKEN_SECRET

Steps:

  • Create a new file called script.rb

  • Type """Publish text and image on Twitter""" on line 1 and press CTRL + RETURN to view suggestions.

  • Accept the following solution:

    require 'twitter'
    
    # Create a new Twitter API object
    client = Twitter::REST::Client.new do |config|
      config.consumer_key        = ENV['TWITTER_CONSUMER_KEY']
      config.consumer_secret     = ENV['TWITTER_CONSUMER_SECRET']
      config.access_token        = ENV['TWITTER_ACCESS_TOKEN']
      config.access_token_secret = ENV['TWITTER_ACCESS_TOKEN_SECRET']
    end
    
    # Create a new message
    message = Twitter::Tweet.new do |tweet|
      tweet.text = 'Hello world'
    end
    
    # Publish the message
    client.update(message)
  • If you haven't already, set the environment variables on your machine with setenv, export, etc. E.g. on macOS that would be

    export YOUR_CONSUMER_KEY=foobar
    export YOUR_CONSUMER_SECRET=foobar
    export YOUR_ACCESS_TOKEN=foobar
    export YOUR_ACCESS_TOKEN_SECRET=foobar
  • Replace the "Test" string in client.update("Test") with the message of your choice e.g.

    client.update("I posted this Tweet using code provided by by GitHub Copilot! 🤯")
  • Run the script and take a look at your Twitter profile to see your Tweet.

  • Now, let's see if we can post an image too. Remove the following code:

    # Publish the message
    client.update(message)
  • Type # Publish a Tweet with an image on the final and press CTRL + RETURN to view suggestions. Accept the following suggestion:

    # Publish a tweet with an image
    client.update_with_media('Hello World!', 'image.jpg')
  • Edit the script text and image to your liking to run it again.

That's it. Hopefully you didn't run to any problems. We tried to keep this example simple and lacking in error-handling. Hopefully any issues are straightforward to troubleshoot.

back to list of Copilot examples