Well, lets says you want to display the twitter accounts the user has on their device in a table. You'll likely want to display the avatar in the table cell, in which case you'll need to query Twitter's API.
Assuming you've got an NSArray of ACAccount objects, you could create a dictionary to store extra profile information for each account. Your table view controller's tableView:cellForRowAtIndexPath: would need some code like this:
// Assuming that you've dequeued/created a UITableViewCell...
// Check to see if we have the profile image of this account
UIImage *profileImage = nil;
NSDictionary *info = [self.twitterProfileInfos objectForKey:account.identifier];
if (info) profileImage = [info objectForKey:kTwitterProfileImageKey];
if (profileImage) {
// You'll probably want some neat code to round the corners of the UIImageView
// for the top/bottom cells of a grouped style `UITableView`.
cell.imageView.image = profileImage;
} else {
[self getTwitterProfileImageForAccount:account completion:^ {
// Reload this row
[self.tableView reloadRowsAtIndexPaths:[NSArray arrayWithObject:indexPath] withRowAnimation:UITableViewRowAnimationFade];
}];
}
All this is doing is accessing a UIImage object from a dictionary of dictionaries, keyed by the account identifier and then a static NSString key. If it doesn't get an image object, then it calls an instance method, passing in a completion handler block, which reloads the table row. The instance methods looks a bit like this:
#pragma mark - Twitter
- (void)getTwitterProfileImageForAccount:(ACAccount *)account completion:(void(^)(void))completion {
// Create the URL
NSURL *url = [NSURL URLWithString:@"users/profile_image" relativeToURL:kTwitterApiRootURL];
// Create the parameters
NSDictionary *params = [NSDictionary dictionaryWithObjectsAndKeys:
account.username, @"screen_name",
@"bigger", @"size",
nil];
// Create a TWRequest to get the the user's profile image
TWRequest *request = [[TWRequest alloc] initWithURL:url parameters:params requestMethod:TWRequestMethodGET];
// Execute the request
[request performRequestWithHandler:^(NSData *responseData, NSHTTPURLResponse *urlResponse, NSError *error) {
// Handle any errors properly, not like this!
if (!responseData && error) {
abort();
}
// We should now have some image data
UIImage *profileImg = [UIImage imageWithData:responseData];
// Get or create an info dictionary for this account if one doesn't already exist
NSMutableDictionary *info = [self.twitterProfileInfos objectForKey:account.identifier];
if (!info) {
info = [NSMutableDictionary dictionary];
[self.twitterProfileInfos setObject:info forKey:account.identifier];
}
// Set the image in the profile
[info setObject:profileImg forKey:kTwitterProfileImageKey];
// Execute our own completion handler
if (completion) dispatch_async(dispatch_get_main_queue(), completion);
}];
}
So, make sure you fail gracefully, but, that will then update the table as it downloads the profile images. In your completion handler you could put these in an image cache, or otherwise persist them beyond the class's lifetime.
The same procedure could be used to access other Twitter user information, see their docs.