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github/x-twitter-scraper

github

x-twitter-scraper

Build GitHub Copilot workflows with Xquik X API SDKs, REST endpoints, MCP tools, TweetClaw OpenClaw plugin installs, signed webhooks, tweet search, user lookup, follower exports, media actions, and agent automation.

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New~1.3k
v1.0Saved Jun 26, 2026

X Twitter Scraper

Use this skill when a user wants to integrate Xquik into an app, script, data pipeline, or AI agent workflow for X API and Twitter scraper tasks.

Use Cases

  • Search tweets, fetch tweet details, read timelines, and download media.
  • Look up users, check relationships, and export followers or following.
  • Start extraction jobs for replies, reposts, quotes, likes, lists, communities, articles, and search results.
  • Create account monitors and verify HMAC-signed webhook events.
  • Add TypeScript, Python, Go, Java, Kotlin, C#, Ruby, PHP, CLI, or Terraform clients.
  • Connect agent runtimes through the Xquik MCP server.
  • Install TweetClaw when the workflow belongs inside OpenClaw and needs plugin-managed approvals for X account actions.

Source Checks

Before writing code, inspect the current Xquik source material:

Do not invent endpoint names, request fields, response fields, scopes, pricing, limits, or package names. Read the relevant SDK README and API reference page first.

Implementation Flow

  1. Identify the workflow: search, lookup, extraction, monitor, webhook, media, write action, billing, or MCP.
  2. Choose the integration surface: generated SDK for application code, REST for custom clients, MCP for agents, TweetClaw for OpenClaw plugin workflows, or webhooks for event delivery.
  3. Confirm authentication requirements from the docs and use environment variables for API keys.
  4. Use typed request and response models when an SDK exists for the user's language.
  5. Add retries and pagination according to the SDK or API docs.
  6. Add explicit user confirmation before write actions, payment flows, or long-running monitoring.
  7. Keep webhook verification server-side and compare HMAC signatures before processing events.
  8. Return structured data to the caller instead of scraping generated UI output.

SDK Pattern

When application code is involved, match the SDK to the user's project language:

  • Inspect project files and package manifests to identify the language and framework.
  • Open the SDK index, then read the matching SDK README before choosing install commands, package names, imports, or client methods.
  • Prefer the official SDK for the detected language when one exists.
  • Use REST only when the project language has no suitable official SDK or the user asks for a custom client.
  • Keep API keys in environment variables or the project's existing secret manager.

Use project-native typed request and response models. Keep network calls in server-side code unless the SDK docs explicitly support browser use.

Webhook Pattern

When adding webhook handlers:

  • Read the documented signing header name and payload format.
  • Verify the HMAC signature before parsing business logic.
  • Reject missing, malformed, or mismatched signatures.
  • Make handlers idempotent because webhook delivery can retry.
  • Store only the fields needed for the product workflow.

MCP Pattern

Use the MCP server when the user wants an agent to explore or call Xquik tools directly. Keep application code on REST or SDK clients when the app needs stable typed contracts, tests, or internal abstractions.

OpenClaw Plugin Pattern

Use TweetClaw when the user is working in OpenClaw, wants installable plugin metadata, or needs an approval-reviewed path for account-changing X actions. Keep application services on REST or SDK clients when the project needs typed contracts, server-side abstractions, or long-lived backend jobs outside OpenClaw.

Before suggesting install commands or tool names, read the TweetClaw README and package metadata. Do not assume the published npm version matches source HEAD.

Treat create, reply, quote, like, bookmark, retweet, follow, delete, media, and monitor actions as approval-worthy unless the current TweetClaw docs state a narrower policy. Keep read-only tweet search, reply search, profile lookup, follower export, and evidence collection low risk, while still respecting rate limits and account authorization.

Safety And Accuracy

  • Keep language neutral and technical.
  • State that Xquik is a third-party X data and automation API.
  • Do not claim affiliation with X Corp.
  • Do not bypass access controls or platform policies.
  • Do not expose API keys, webhook secrets, account cookies, tokens, or raw signatures.
  • Do not hard-code credentials in examples or tests.
  • Do not document private infrastructure details.
  • Prefer official Xquik docs, SDK READMEs, and the OpenAPI spec over memory.
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Overall Score

82/100

Grade

B

Good

Safety

88

Quality

83

Clarity

78

Completeness

76

Summary

A skill for integrating Xquik X API SDKs into applications and agent workflows. It guides developers through REST API calls, SDK client setup, MCP tool integration, webhook handlers, TweetClaw plugin installation, and authentication—with emphasis on reading authoritative documentation, protecting credentials, and obtaining user consent for write actions.

Detected Capabilities

network-requestrest-api-clientsdk-integrationenvironment-variable-readwebhook-handlermcp-integrationplugin-installation

Trigger Keywords

Phrases that MCP clients use to match this skill to user intent.

integrate xquik apitweet search and scrapingx user lookupwebhook verificationtwitter data exportagent x integrationtweetclaw plugin

Risk Signals

INFO

REST API interaction with external service (X/Twitter via Xquik)

Implementation Flow section
INFO

Environment variable usage for API key storage

SDK Pattern section
INFO

HMAC webhook signature verification

Webhook Pattern section
INFO

Guidance to confirm user consent before write actions

Implementation Flow section

Referenced Domains

External domains referenced in skill content, detected by static analysis.

docs.xquik.comgithub.comregistry.npmjs.orgxquik.com

Use Cases

  • Search tweets and fetch tweet details from X via REST API or SDK
  • Look up users and export followers/following lists
  • Start extraction jobs for replies, reposts, quotes, and likes
  • Monitor X accounts and verify HMAC-signed webhook events
  • Integrate Xquik SDKs (TypeScript, Python, Go, Java, Kotlin, C#, Ruby, PHP) into application code
  • Connect AI agents to Xquik via MCP server for autonomous X operations
  • Install TweetClaw OpenClaw plugins for approval-managed X account actions

Quality Notes

  • Clear separation of integration patterns (SDK, REST, MCP, webhook, OpenClaw plugin) with specific use cases for each
  • Strong emphasis on consulting authoritative documentation (API docs, SDK READMEs, OpenAPI spec) rather than inventing endpoints or fields
  • Explicit security guidance: environment variables for secrets, HMAC signature verification, no hardcoding of credentials, user consent before write actions
  • Good practical detail on webhook idempotency and retry handling
  • Well-defined language support matrix (TypeScript, Python, Go, Java, Kotlin, C#, Ruby, PHP, CLI, Terraform)
  • Limitations clearly stated: do not bypass platform policies, do not expose credentials, do not make undocumented claims about X Corp affiliation
  • Strong focus on scope boundaries—distinguishes when to use REST vs SDK vs MCP vs TweetClaw based on project context
Model: claude-haiku-4-5-20251001Analyzed: Jun 26, 2026

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