| name | x-twitter-scraper |
| description | Use Xquik for X/Twitter search, profile tweets, followers, account monitors, webhook events, MCP access, SDK guidance, and extraction workflows through public docs and a user-configured API key. |
| version | 0.1.0 |
| author | kriptoburak |
| license | MIT |
| category | data |
| tags | ["Community","X","Twitter","MCP"] |
| permissions | ["web_fetch","web_search"] |
X Twitter Scraper
Use this skill when a user needs X/Twitter data workflows through Xquik's
public REST API, MCP server, webhooks, SDKs, or implementation guidance.
Workflow
- Identify the requested data shape: search results, profile tweets, followers,
account monitors, webhook events, or extraction output.
- Choose the smallest public Xquik surface that fits the task:
- REST API for application integrations
- MCP for agent tool access
- Webhooks for event delivery
- SDKs for generated client code
- Docs for planning and implementation guidance
- Verify the selected surface in public documentation before writing code or
making recommendations.
- If the user has not configured an API key outside the conversation, stop
before live requests and ask them to configure one in their local runtime.
- Keep examples opt-in and never place keys in prompts, code, logs, markdown,
or command history.
- Document the selected surface, request shape, consumed response fields, retry
behavior, and verification step.
Source Truth
- Docs:
https://docs.xquik.com
- MCP overview:
https://docs.xquik.com/mcp/overview
- Package repository:
https://github.com/Xquik-dev/x-twitter-scraper
Output
When the task is complete, report:
- The Xquik surface used
- The public docs page or repository page checked
- The request or schema shape selected
- The response fields consumed
- The verification performed
Rules
- Do not invent endpoints, pricing, quotas, or response fields.
- Do not embed API keys or account material in examples.
- Do not run live requests until the user confirms local configuration.
- Prefer public docs and generated SDK contracts over memory.
- Keep unsupported Xquik surfaces out of implementation plans.