The user to send a message to, either character or
an user object.
dm
The message to delete, an object of class directMessage
n
The maximum number of direct messages to return
sinceID
If not NULL, an ID representing the earliest
boundary
maxID
If not NULL, an ID representing the newest ID you
wish to retrieve
...
Further arguments to pass along the communication chain
Value
These functions will not work without OAuth authentication
The dmGet and dmSent functions will return a list of
directMessage objects. The former will retrieve DMs
sent to the user while the latter retrieves messages sent from the user.
The dmDestroy function takes a directMessage
object (perhaps from either dmGet or dmSent) and will
delete it from the Twitter server.
The dmSend function will send a message to another Twitter user.
Author(s)
Jeff Gentry
See Also
directMessage, registerTwitterOAuth
Examples
## Not run:
dms <- dmGet()
dms
## delete the first one
dms[[1]]$destroy()
dmDestroy(dms[[2]])
## send a DM
dmSend('Testing out twitteR!', 'twitter')
## End(Not run)