How do I find my favorite tweets?
Índice
- How do I find my favorite tweets?
- How do I see my top tweets of all time?
- How do I see all my own tweets?
- Why do likes appear on Twitter?
- Why do I have no likes on Twitter?
- How do you look at your old tweets?
- How can you find old tweets quickly?
- Can someone see if you like and unlike a tweet?
- How do you search your own tweets?
- How do you look up old tweets?
- Who can see your tweets on Twitter?
- Who can see protected tweets?
How do I find my favorite tweets?
To view your Favorites on Twitter, follow these directions:
- Go to to www.twitter.com and sign in.
- On your home page, look on the right side for "Favorites".
- Click on Favorites and it will take you to a page with a list of all your Favorited Tweets.
How do I see my top tweets of all time?
Another way you can do this is if you're not using Buffer then just go over to analytics.twitter.com. Click on view all tweet activity. Once we're in our Twitter analytics, we can choose Top Tweets. And they say we want to just look at the Top Tweets from the last seven days – or you can choose by month.
How do I see all my own tweets?
Here's how:
- Navigate to twitter.com/search-advanced in a web browser.
- Locate the From These Accounts field and type in your own Twitter handle. ...
- Fill out at least one other field to help narrow down your results. ...
- Click the Search button to see your results, which display directly on Twitter.
Why do likes appear on Twitter?
Seeing random tweets in your timeline, like tweets favorited by people you follow? Twitter CEO Dick Costolo has offered up one reason why: ... Costolo's tweet follows Twitter's recent plans to begin showing tweets favorited by people you follow and popular tweets from people you don't follow in user timelines.
Why do I have no likes on Twitter?
Twitter's prototype Twttr app hides likes and RTs behind a tap in a bid to "focus on replies". The app, called “Twttr” in reference to founder Jack Dorsey's first tweet, suggests a few changes to the social media platform we've all come to love-hate. ...
How do you look at your old tweets?
How to See Old Tweets Using Twitter Search
- Open Twitter.com in your browser and click the search bar.
- Type in the following thread together with your Twitter username.
- Also, put the date range you want to dig back (username since: yyyy-mm-dd until yyyy-mm-dd). ...
- Scroll to the bottom to see your old tweets.
How can you find old tweets quickly?
Login to your Twitter account, and go to Twitter's advanced search page.
- Under the “People” subheading, enter your username (with no “@”) into the “From these accounts” field:
- Under “Dates,” select start and end dates for your search:
- Click “Search,” and Twitter should return a list of top tweets from that period:
Can someone see if you like and unlike a tweet?
If you like a tweet and unliked it instantly, the target account won't be notified.
How do you search your own tweets?
- Twitter's Advanced Search is the easiest and fastest way to search through your own tweets, or for any tweets at all for that matter, but if you want, you can get access to all the tweets you've ever tweeted by downloading your Twitter archive. To do this, access your user settings by selecting your profile icon > Settings and privacy.
How do you look up old tweets?
- How to Find Your Old Tweets Using Twitter Search. Open up Twitter.com and go to the search bar: Type in the following string but with your username and the date range you want to look at: from:username since:yyyy-mm-dd until:yyyy-mm-dd.
Who can see your tweets on Twitter?
- If you have a public account, then non-followers and anyone with internet access can read your tweets. "Your followers read your Tweets. If your Tweets are public, anyone who runs a search for a keyword in your Tweet may be able to see that message," Twitter states on its new user FAQ page.
Who can see protected tweets?
- Only approved followers can see protected tweets, which don't appear in Google or Twitter searches. If you want to view protected tweets, send a follow request to the account holder who then decides whether or not to give you access. Close-up of a man browsing Twitter on his iPhone.