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Yuki said>><FONT
face="Times New Roman">A specific example of practical usage should be given for
AFLfunctions in the reference, I think. These examples should
bewritten in NON-PROGRAMMING prose. ^_^ They should be the antithesisof
Linux MAN pages. They should take little grasshoppers like me andlead
them to discovering practical usages for the function.I would be willing
to help anyone that would like to work on thistype of project. I'm
afraid, though, that my contribution would belimited to cleaning up the
wording, and making it clear. And also,if I can understand it, it's
probably a great filter for 'ready' or'not
ready'.Yuki
<FONT
face="Times New Roman">==============================================
I am willing to contribute to Yuki's
request for volunteers to write non-techie descriptions of how
Amibroker works. Below, I have written a non-techie answer to a post by
Glen which asked about the setting n=1 in AA.
Anthony's answer is obviously correct, but
I am rewriting it here in the kind of very thorough and
non-tech manner that Yuki and I would like to be able to read in
the users manual. Such non-tech descriptions as Yuki suggests
will be of enormous help other non-tech newbys and users. Amibroker
users will need to suggest changes to this description if it is
not totally accurate. Also, please suggest changes if you have idea's of
how to make this description clearer. <FONT
face="Times New Roman"> The
description is directly below.
<FONT face=Arial
size=2>=======================================================================
When you set n=1, AA
will check only the latest dated bar in your database in order to see
if your AFL conditions has been met on only the latest dated bar.
However, while Amibroker is executing your particular AFL instructions, it
still needs to retrieve data from earlier dated bars in order to
produce things such as moving average calculations, and other calculations
that will be required by your AFL coding.<FONT
face="Times New Roman">
When you set n=10, Amibroker
will follow exactly the same procedure that it did when you
set n=1. The only difference is , Amibroker will first check the bar
that is positioned 10 periods back from the present bar. A
period will be in seconds, minutes, hours, days, months, or whatever
you happen to have available in your database for Amibroker to
check. Once Amibroker is through checking the 10'th bar back, it
moves forward to check the 9'th bar, then on to the 8'th
bar, and so on, till it finally checks the n=1 bar last.
<FONT face=Arial
size=2>====================================================================
I am willing to do write more of
these descriptions in order to help newby's and us non-techies gain
a better understanding of how Amibroker works. I am
not technically capable, nor do I have the time, to contribute
anything beyond the writing of a few of these
descriptions.
I will wait and see if Yuki, or anyone else is interested in
taking this further. Ron D
<FONT face=Arial
size=2>==============================================================================
<FONT
face="Times New Roman">
From: <A title=ajf1111@xxxxxxxx
href="">Anthony Faragasso
<BLOCKQUOTE
>
To: <A title=amibroker@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
href="">amibroker@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Sent: Saturday, September 13, 2003 5:52
PM
Subject: Re: [amibroker] Re: FILTER
questions.
Glenn,Setting n=1, AA will check the last bar for your
filter criteria....settingn=100 , AA will check the last 100
bars...Anthony
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