Looking back at the chapter, we really did a lot. I encourage you to go through the code on GitHub as well as the Tweetinvi documentation available at https://github.com/linvi/tweetinvi. In this chapter, we saw how to register our application on Twitter's Application Management console. We saw that we could easily add Twitter functionality to our ASP.NET Core MVC app by using a NuGet package called Tweetinvi. We had a look at routing as well as controllers, models, views, and storing the settings in the appsetting.json
file.
We were able to authenticate ourselves with OAuth and read the last 10 tweets from our home timeline. Lastly, we were able to post a tweet and view it in our home timeline.
There is still a lot of work that can be done inside of our Twitter Clone application. I hope that you have found it an interesting chapter and hope that you continue to work on it to improve it for your specific workflow and make it your own.
In the next chapter, we will be taking a look at...