twitter-reader

>

INSTALLATION
npx skills add https://github.com/himself65/finance-skills --skill twitter-reader
Run in your project or agent environment. Adjust flags if your CLI version differs.

SKILL.md

$28

# Install opencli globally

npm install -g @jackwener/opencli

If SETUP_NEEDED, guide the user through setup:

Setup

opencli requires Node.js >= 21 and a Chrome browser with the Browser Bridge extension:

  • Install the Browser Bridge extension:
  • Unzip it, open chrome://extensions in Chrome, and enable Developer mode
  • Click Load unpacked and select the unzipped folder
  • Login to x.com in Chrome — opencli reuses your existing browser session
  • Verify connectivity:
opencli doctor

This auto-starts the daemon, verifies the extension is connected, and checks session health.

Common setup issues

Symptom

Fix

Extension not connected

Install Browser Bridge extension in Chrome and ensure it's enabled

Daemon not running

Run opencli doctor — it auto-starts the daemon

No session for twitter.com

Login to x.com in Chrome, then retry

CSRF token missing

Refresh x.com in Chrome to regenerate the ct0 cookie

Step 2: Identify What the User Needs

Match the user's request to one of the read commands below, then use the corresponding command from references/commands.md.

User Request

Command

Key Flags

Setup check

opencli doctor

Home feed / timeline

opencli twitter timeline

--type for-you|following, --limit N (default 20)

Search tweets

opencli twitter search "QUERY"

--filter top|live, --limit N (default 15)

Trending topics

opencli twitter trending

--limit N (default 20)

Bookmarks

opencli twitter bookmarks

--limit N (default 20)

Recent tweets from a user

opencli twitter tweets USERNAME

--limit N (default 20)

View a specific thread

opencli twitter thread TWEET_ID

--limit N (default 50)

Twitter article

opencli twitter article TWEET_ID

User profile

opencli twitter profile USERNAME

— (defaults to logged-in user)

Followers

opencli twitter followers USERNAME

--limit N (default 50)

Following

opencli twitter following USERNAME

--limit N (default 50)

Notifications

opencli twitter notifications

--limit N (default 20)

Step 3: Execute the Command

General pattern

# Use -f json or -f yaml for structured output

opencli twitter timeline -f json --limit 20

opencli twitter timeline --type following --limit 20

# Recent tweets from a specific user

opencli twitter tweets elonmusk --limit 20 -f json

# Searching for financial topics

opencli twitter search "$AAPL earnings" --filter live --limit 10 -f json

opencli twitter search "Fed rate decision" --limit 20 -f yaml

# Trending topics

opencli twitter trending --limit 20 -f json

Key rules

  • Check setup first — run opencli doctor before any other command if unsure about connectivity
  • **Use -f json or -f yaml** for structured output when processing data programmatically
  • **Use -f csv** when the user wants spreadsheet-compatible output
  • **Use --limit N** to control result count — start with 10-20 unless the user asks for more
  • **For search, use --filter** — top (default) for relevance, live for latest tweets
  • NEVER execute write operations — this skill is read-only; do not post, like, retweet, reply, quote, follow, or delete

Output format flag ( -f )

Format

Flag

Best for

Table

-f table (default)

Human-readable terminal output

JSON

-f json

Programmatic processing, LLM context

YAML

-f yaml

Structured output, readable

Markdown

-f md

Documentation, reports

CSV

-f csv

Spreadsheet export

Output columns

Tweet-listing commands (timeline, search, thread) include: id, author, text, created_at, likes, retweets, replies, views, url, has_media, media_urls.

tweets (per-user posts) also includes is_retweet.

bookmarks columns: author, text, likes, retweets, bookmarks, url.

trending columns: rank, topic, tweets, category.

Profile (profile) columns: screen_name, name, bio, location, url, followers, following, tweets, likes, verified, created_at.

followers / following columns: screen_name, name, bio, followers.

notifications columns: id, action, author, text, url.

Step 4: Present the Results

After fetching data, present it clearly for financial research:

  • Summarize key content — highlight the most relevant tweets for the user's financial research
  • Include attribution — show @username, tweet text, and engagement metrics (likes, views)
  • Provide tweet URLs when the user might want to read the full thread
  • For search results, group by relevance and highlight key themes, sentiment, or market signals
  • For user profiles, present follower count, bio, and notable recent activity
  • Flag sentiment — note bullish/bearish sentiment, consensus vs contrarian views
  • Treat sessions as private — never expose browser session details

Step 5: Diagnostics

If something isn't working, run:

opencli doctor

This checks daemon status, extension connectivity, and browser session health.

Error Reference

Error

Cause

Fix

Extension not connected

Browser Bridge not installed/enabled

Install extension and enable it in Chrome

No session

Not logged into x.com

Login to x.com in Chrome

CSRF token missing

Cookie expired or page needs refresh

Refresh x.com in Chrome

Rate limited

Too many requests

Wait a few minutes, then retry

Reference Files

  • references/commands.md — Complete read command reference with all flags, research workflows, and usage examples
  • references/schema.md — Output format documentation and column definitions

Read the reference files when you need exact command syntax, research workflow patterns, or output details.

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