[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

Re: [amibroker] Re: Front End Interface with IB



PureBytes Links

Trading Reference Links

hi,

you can write these tools yourself.  I wrote a simple tool a while back. Have a look. It is best you understand what it does before you use it.  Or try it out on a Simulated Trading account.

http://members.home.nl/empottasch/Amibroker/Day%20Trading/My%20First%20Tool.htm


Ed



  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Bargains Club 
  To: amibroker@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx 
  Sent: Tuesday, July 04, 2006 9:24 PM
  Subject: RE: [amibroker] Re: Front End Interface with IB



  I feel exactly the same!  I do day trading and I like to keep my eye on  the chart at all time.  Do not like to flip back and forth between different programs.



  I hope Thomasz will add this feature to AB soon!  : )





  Michael






------------------------------------------------------------------------------

  From: amibroker@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:amibroker@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Charles J. Dudek
  Sent: Tuesday, July 04, 2006 11:57 AM
  To: amibroker@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
  Subject: [amibroker] Re: Front End Interface with IB



  I don't know how you work, but when I am trading I like to watch 
  charts. If I have to switch back and forth between TWS or some other 
  order entry package and my charting package, I will lose valuable 
  seconds and make mistakes (like manually entering GG when I meant to 
  enter GGB, for example). Scottrade Elite, Fidelity, TD Ameritrade, E-
  Trade, TradeStation and as far as I know just about every other 
  broker has an integrated charting and order entry interface. IB 
  offers trading options and advantages I can't get elsewhere, but 
  their charting is terrible. QuoteTracker is too limited and 
  alternatives like eSignal are too expensive. I just know switching 
  back and forth is going to be a lot less efficient than keeping one 
  screen open and clicking on a chart to execute a trade. I think 
  AmiBroker is great in every other respect. I just wish I could get 
  this manual entry screen to work. I'm so busy I don't want to spend 
  any of my spare time to try to figure out how to get it to work, but 
  I guess that's my only option if I want to trade through IB. I might 
  just buy it and play with it, but that's a couple hundred bucks down 
  the drain if I can't get it to work right. What I'm really worried 
  about though is screwing it up and accidentally cleaning out my 
  trading account. That would be a real drag.

  Chuck

  --- In amibroker@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, "scourt2000" <stevehite@xxx> wrote:
  >
  > 
  > What do you have to substantially gain by manually entering trades 
  > to IB through Amibroker? Why would you discount its use in trading 
  > just because of this? Do you realize that its capabilities to help 
  > you backtest trading ideas far exceeds the trivial kind of 
  > restriction you're placing on its use?
  > 
  > I cannot name another piece of software that even comes close to 
  > what Amibroker can do for what you pay. 
  > 
  > There is a SIMPLE answer to your problem. I'm assuming that you 
  > abhor the TWS interface to placing trades manually, including the 
  > use of BookTrader. If that's the case, then just use a free IB 
  > front-end like TSIM+:
  > 
  > http://www.tradingsimulation.com/index.html
  > 
  > IMHO, the problem is not with Amibroker. It's that you have not 
  > sufficiently researched your options. There are plenty of front-
  > ends to trading with IB. Some are free, some want a one-time 
  > donation and others have a monthly fee. I think that the one 
  above 
  > is the best no-strings-attached interface which is completely free.
  > 
  > If this is still not acceptable, then get TradeStation and, if you 
  > meet their minimum monthly trading requirements, their platform is 
  > free. Of course, you'll have to place all trades through their 
  > brokerage firm but trading is completely integrated into their 
  > charting package. TradeStation has an excellent intraday database 
  > going back years. However, their porfolio backtesting is 
  > dramatically inferior in speed and options to what Amibroker offers.
  >