How to add a location filter to tweepy module

I have found the following piece of code that works pretty well for letting me view in Python Shell the standard 1% of the twitter firehose:

import sys
import tweepy

consumer_key=""
consumer_secret=""
access_key = ""
access_secret = "" 


auth = tweepy.OAuthHandler(consumer_key, consumer_secret)
auth.set_access_token(access_key, access_secret)
api = tweepy.API(auth)


class CustomStreamListener(tweepy.StreamListener):
    def on_status(self, status):
        print status.text

    def on_error(self, status_code):
        print >> sys.stderr, 'Encountered error with status code:', status_code
        return True # Don't kill the stream

    def on_timeout(self):
        print >> sys.stderr, 'Timeout...'
        return True # Don't kill the stream

sapi = tweepy.streaming.Stream(auth, CustomStreamListener())
sapi.filter(track=['manchester united'])

How do I add a filter to only parse tweets from a certain location? Ive seen people adding GPS to other twitter related Python code but I cant find anything specific to sapi within the Tweepy module.

Any ideas?

Thanks

Answers:

Thank you for visiting the Q&A section on Magenaut. Please note that all the answers may not help you solve the issue immediately. So please treat them as advisements. If you found the post helpful (or not), leave a comment & I’ll get back to you as soon as possible.

Method 1

The streaming API doesn’t allow to filter by location AND keyword simultaneously.

Bounding boxes do not act as filters for other filter parameters. For example
track=twitter&locations=-122.75,36.8,-121.75,37.8 would match any tweets containing
the term Twitter (even non-geo tweets) OR coming from the San Francisco area.

Source: https://dev.twitter.com/docs/streaming-apis/parameters#locations

What you can do is ask the streaming API for keyword or located tweets and then filter the resulting stream in your app by looking into each tweet.

If you modify the code as follows you will capture tweets in United Kingdom, then those tweets get filtered to only show those that contain “manchester united”

import sys
import tweepy

consumer_key=""
consumer_secret=""
access_key=""
access_secret=""

auth = tweepy.OAuthHandler(consumer_key, consumer_secret)
auth.set_access_token(access_key, access_secret)
api = tweepy.API(auth)


class CustomStreamListener(tweepy.StreamListener):
    def on_status(self, status):
        if 'manchester united' in status.text.lower():
            print status.text

    def on_error(self, status_code):
        print >> sys.stderr, 'Encountered error with status code:', status_code
        return True # Don't kill the stream

    def on_timeout(self):
        print >> sys.stderr, 'Timeout...'
        return True # Don't kill the stream

sapi = tweepy.streaming.Stream(auth, CustomStreamListener())    
sapi.filter(locations=[-6.38,49.87,1.77,55.81])

Method 2

Juan gave the correct answer. I’m filtering for Germany only using this:

# Bounding boxes for geolocations
# Online-Tool to create boxes (c+p as raw CSV): http://boundingbox.klokantech.com/
GEOBOX_WORLD = [-180,-90,180,90]
GEOBOX_GERMANY = [5.0770049095, 47.2982950435, 15.0403900146, 54.9039819757]

stream.filter(locations=GEOBOX_GERMANY)

This is a pretty crude box that includes parts of some other countries. If you want a finer grain you can combine multiple boxes to fill out the location you need.

It should be noted though that you limit the number of tweets quite a bit if you filter by geotags. This is from roughly 5 million Tweets from my test database (the query should return the %age of tweets that actually contain a geolocation):

> db.tweets.find({coordinates:{$ne:null}}).count() / db.tweets.count()
0.016668392651547598

So only 1.67% of my sample of the 1% stream include a geotag. However there’s other ways of figuring out a user’s location:
http://arxiv.org/ftp/arxiv/papers/1403/1403.2345.pdf

Method 3

You can’t filter it while streaming but you could filter it at the output stage, if you were writing the tweets to a file.

Method 4

sapi.filter(track=[‘manchester united’],locations=[‘GPS Coordinates’])


All methods was sourced from stackoverflow.com or stackexchange.com, is licensed under cc by-sa 2.5, cc by-sa 3.0 and cc by-sa 4.0

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