I guess I don't see how you can arrange panes until you have selected indicators/charts/ etc.
But anyway, what I want to do is create a single window chart, in it will be a series of panes that go like this:
-Window
--ChartPane( tall) Ticker1 (Price) + (VolumeAtPrice)
--ChartPane( short) Ticker1 (Volume)
--ChartPane( tall) Ticker2 (Price) + VolumeAtPrice) << Note this should be the volume of Ticker2, not Ticker1 which is currently what happens
--ChartPane( short) Ticker2 (Volume) << Note that this should be volume of Ticker2, not Ticker1, which is currently that happens when I add Volume to a "foreign" subchart (same as above)
.... and on and on like this for about a total of 5 tickers, all with 1 minute intervals.
On top of this, each tall pane should have the same height, and each short pane should have the same height. As it is now, I have to go one by one and jigger them to try to eyeball the height and it never comes out right and it just ends up displacing the ones before and after it. Is there some way to make them all equidistant/ height?
Once I have this all set up I want to then be able to re-use it for different sets of tickers, and have code that runs algorithms on each set of 5 tickers (with their corresponding 5 volume sub panes).
Hopefully this makes sense. I appreciate all the help. Don't think I am being lazy, I am reading a ton and trying to put as much together as I can on my own.
--- In amibroker@xxxxxxxxx ps.com, "sidhartha70" <sidhartha70@ ...> wrote:
>
> Splitting of charts is decided by the user outside of code Conrad.
> You decide on how you want your panes or charts to look display wise, then you can do anything to them with AFL.
>
> It might help if you just explained exactly what you are trying to achieve... then we can help.
>
> --- In amibroker@xxxxxxxxx ps.com, "Conrad Joach" <consolejoker@ > wrote:
> >
> > Ok I am able to split the chart in two, but how do you do this with code? When I take the code inside the formula of a drag and drop chart, and try to apply it again, it all shows up in the same pane of the chart. Is there a function to split a chart window or create a new pane within it?
> >
> > --- In amibroker@xxxxxxxxx ps.com, "sidhartha70" <sidhartha70@ > wrote:
> > >
> > > Anything you save that is your own code (or a modification of existing code) that you wish to keep you should have in either the 'custom' folder or the 'include' folder. (and of course you can create your own subfolders within these)... the custom & include folders are never touched when you upgrade AB so your code should be safe.
> > >
> > > I can't quite visualize what you say below... it may be because you are using an unpaid version of AB. It may not let you save charts & forumula's until you have a paid version.
> > >
> > > I've been using AB for about a year now... I'm a former C# coder. It takes a while to get your head around AFL... but once you do, you can do pretty much anything with AB. TJ has created a phenominal tool for programmers for an unbelievable price. Bang for your buck wise nothing comes even close to AB.
> > >
> > > Exactly, all the power is in AFL. So get coding!!!
> > >
> > > --- In amibroker@xxxxxxxxx ps.com, "Conrad Joach" <consolejoker@ > wrote:
> > > >
> > > > One quick question. If I edit the formula in the window, and try to save it, it says it wants to save it in a custom folder. I say yes, and then when I try to load the custom version, it seems to be blank. Should I create a fresh AFL script from scratch rather than modify a pre-existing one? Is that how most people do it?
> >
>