Guide to Twitter for R programmers
This repo is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 License
This book is being archived. No further updates are planned. Twitter has undergone significant changes and is officially branded as X.
The aim of this book is to give people a basic introduction to Twitter.
The intended audience is specifically R programmers.
Avoid the temptation to go into a lot of detail, background information or show multiple ways to do things.
We can assume the reader is not completely new to social media and can figure things out.
It's good to be opinionated on what you think it is good/bad/best to do, but lets keep it directed towards positive action e.g. "do this" is preferences "don't do that".
We've moved chapters around, so filenames and chapter numbers dont always match.
I (Oscar) am busy learning the basics of github. I suggest you keep Pull Requests short at first so that I can figure out how to merge them. I may end up accidently deleting something so rather don't do a whole lot of work before putting in the first PR.
Try write once sentence per line in the rmarkdown files - apparently this makes version control a bit easier.