I've never used multicharts but looks like you have Contracts.Default and then longOrder.Send(40)
every scenario will be different.. create a detailed analysis...
holy moly..what a video. thanks
Haha.. true.. better quick start trading them for something else..
it was from 'The Richest Man in Babylon'. The first lesson was to save 10%.. not spend everything.. and I think the compounding came later at the...
came across this quote today.. "If thou select one of thy baskets and put into it each morning ten eggs and take out from it each evening nine...
i found these interesting.. http://www.imf.org/external/research/housing/ https://smartasset.com/mortgage/price-to-rent-ratio-in-us-cities
that's hilarious! i love canadians... they are awesome
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how many times does one have to die?
sounds interesting.. imho if I had to choose to do something real-time like that, given what you've mentioned.. I might try to break up the task...
sounds good. keep us updated
guess you could place the contracts in a csv that you could setup in excel but read in and parse.. even using columns to specify months.. and use...
think I know what you meant now. cheers
how is a day trader not able to compound?
import itertools GEcontracts = ('GEH7.CME', 'GEM7.CME', 'GEU7.CME', 'GEZ7.CME', 'GEH8.CME') print(tuple(itertools.combinations(GEcontracts, 2)))...
will any of this help? https://docs.python.org/3/library/itertools.html *didn't look too close just did a quick search
my first thought is that it sounds like a waste going thru the loop at runtime. is there a reason why you don't want to just define the spreads?
are you still around?
hi SimpleMeLike.. I'm sure everyone handles it differently. But, what I do is .. let's say I based it off of 10 yrs (I like to at least go back to...
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