Graham,
Sorry - I sent my reply to your PM by mistake.
I 
  think these discussions help Tomasz and the community in general so 
here 
  is my viewpoint.
I agree with your suggestion - it is the sensible 
  thing to do and a 
lot are doing just that ("God helps those who help 
  themselves" 
and "if you want something done do it your self") - you are 
  correct.
I wonder, though, how many thousands of hours you have put 
  into 
your 'keeps' and whether the majority, who work full time, are able 
  
to match that?
However, I also agree with the others that we need a 
  good AFL book 
and IMO Tomasz is the man to write it - yes, even if he has 
  to stop 
development to do it - take a sabbatical and get out the feathered 
  
pen Tomasz (I don't think Howard is doing an AFL book - although his 
  
books go a long way towards it).
I actually drew a temporary line 
  in the sand at starting my own mini-
database of 
  clippings.
Reasons:
AB is not my first and last love.
It has 
  taken an inordinate amount of my time to learn and I still 
haven't got to 
  the bottom of it.
I have to draw the line somewhere since it is my 
  intention to be a 
professional trader and not a professional 
  amibrokerist.
As well as that I am a conceptual learner so I want to 
  learn how to 
do it from first principle and not just memorize it like a 
  parrot.
Code help is great after you have exhuasted all personal 
  efforts.
That is what training should do - teach us how to do it from 
  first 
princples rather than keeping a compendium of everyone elses past 
  
solutions.
As well as that I have a philosophical objection to 
  1000's of people 
having to labour away in private over their own AB 
  training manuals 
(a very inefficient use of precious HUMAN resources - 
  "life is a 
short warm moment, death is along cold rest" - Pink 
  Floyd).
Also I like books.
They represent 10 -20 years of the 
  authors live (the best part of it) 
packed into a considered, ordered and 
  edited presentation, all for 
the bargain basement price of around $100 
  bucks.
Given the choice I would rather have a Tomasz 500 page AFL book 
  than 
anyone's 5000 page compendium of forum clips 
  etc.
brian_z
--- In amibroker@xxxxxxxxxps.com, 
  Graham <kavemanperth@...> wrote:
>
> Why not do what I 
  have done over the years, any useful tips from 
posts
> are pasted to 
  my own library
> 
> There is a wealth of information in the 
  various sources, it is just 
a
> matter of reading and working 
  through the tons of examples. eg AB
> library, AB yahoo groups file 
  libraries, AB yahoo groups posts 
(search
> for different 
  topics/keywords), User Knowledge base, AB Knowledge
> base, AB 
  members area, and not to forget the AB help files (that
> contain a 
  great search facility), and probably a few more I cannot
> recall from 
  top of the head
> 
> -- 
> Cheers
> Graham Kav
> 
  AFL Writing Service
> http://www.aflwriting.com
> 
  
> On 08/02/2008, brian_z111 <brian_z111@...> wrote:
> 
  > Some people do better with a book because of the formal 
  structured
> > approach. I agree with you on the wealth of resources 
  though. We
> > shouldn't overlook the forum either. Look at the 
  answer at 
VarSelect
> > (var1, var2,n) etc - the forum virtually 
  wrote a chapter on 
demand -
> > you can't beat that.
> 
  >
> > Graham's and Tomasz's forum answers, over the years, are a 
  book in
> > themselves as well (thanks to all who continually answer 
  code
> > questions in the forum - a book would be nice to have but we 
  
would be
> > lost without you all).
> >
> > 
  brian_z
> >
> >
> > --- In amibroker@xxxxxxxxxps.com, 
  Grant Noble <gruntus@> wrote:
> > >
> > > Did 
  you bother to read the manual or look at the AFL library? 
Those
> 
  > are huge resources in
> > > themselves. More than enough 
  there to begin anyone with coding.
> > When I was starting I was 
  grateful
> > > that I didn't need to spend money on books. Neither 
  do you..
> > >
> > > normanjade wrote:
> > 
  > > I dont get it. Where are we supposed to learn the language? 
  
There
> > > > doesn't seem to be any good resources out 
  there. Anybody know
> > where to
> > > > go? I can 
  only find very basic info.
> > > >
> > > 
  >
>