[WARNING CLOSED!] Any newbie question, so as not to clutter up the forum. Professionals, don't go by. Can't go anywhere without you. - page 784
You are missing trading opportunities:
- Free trading apps
- Over 8,000 signals for copying
- Economic news for exploring financial markets
Registration
Log in
You agree to website policy and terms of use
If you do not have an account, please register
I don't quite understand the principle of operation...if you don't mind a simple example...for example C= A + B
Thank you)
Hi. I want to know how to set the Expert Advisor to open one order at crossing. If it will close the order with plus or minus, it should wait for the next reverse signal.
The tactic is simple
8EMA>26EMA
MACD(5,13,1)>0 (at the second MACD candle an order is opened)
RSI 21 >(50) OPEN BUY
8EMA<26EMA
MACD(5,13,1)<0 (order opened on the second MACD candlestick)
RSI 21 <(50) OPEN SELL
Thank you for your attention.Can anyone suggest an algorithm to check if the last X-orders for a given symbol were
were unprofitable? I have an idea what to do, but I'm afraid it won't be the best option, while the main criteria are
speed of check and minimum load on processor.
Thank you!
Can anyone suggest an algorithm to check if the last X-orders for a given symbol were
were unprofitable? I have an idea what to do, but I'm afraid it won't be the best option, while the main criteria are
speed of check and minimum load on processor.
Thank you!
the function is not mine, but I don't think it's hard to adapt it to the conditions
help who can.... someone knows how to make a trailing stop not linear.... and not constant, but only a given number of times
for example when the price moves to A pips loss moves to B pips.... and then when it moves to C move to D
where letters are not the same value but different....
The function is not mine, but I think it is easy to modify it according to the necessary conditions
That's the "flowers" :) The most interesting part starts afterwards.
I thought in the first loop to sort orders for a given symbol and create an array by ticket.
In the second loop, sort the array by close time.
But then we should get the order profits from their close time - is it possible to somehow connect them?
without going through all orders? - Otherwise we get too many loops.
That's the "flowers" :) The most interesting part starts afterwards.
I thought in the first loop to sort orders for a given symbol and create an array by ticket.
In the second loop, sort the array by close time.
But then we should get the order profits from their close time - is it possible to somehow connect them?
without going through all orders? - Otherwise, we get too many loops.
it means that tickets should be stored in arrays immediately when an order is successfully placed, and then analysis can be done on the tickets
Another variant is to create an additional Expert Advisor that would deal with this - "restore the history" of the terminal and output the data ready to be sent to a file
This means that you should memorize the tickets into arrays right away, when an order is successfully placed, and then analyze them
As an option, I would like to create an additional Expert Advisor that would do this - "restore the history" of the terminal and unload the finished data to a file
I don't want to deal with files as a matter of principle, so as not to tie the Expert Advisor to a certain computer...
It looks like I will have to create in the first loop a new array for the tickets of a specified symbol. And then, in two cycles, sort it
it by date, by remembering the tickets in the new array. From the resulting array, run a new loop to check the profit
for the last orders.
I don't want to mess with files as a matter of principle, so as not to tie the EA to a specific computer...
It looks like I'll have to create a new array in the first loop for the tickets of a given symbol. And then, in two cycles, sort it
it by date, by remembering the tickets in the new array. From the resulting array, run a new loop to check the profit
for the last orders.
Integer has posted code for working with history. Sort by opening, sort by closing. Just have to look it up.