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There will some major differences between Paid consultancy and free afl. I am also a paid consultant. A paid consultant would not disclose a client's work to any third party or use it himself. It is part of the confidentiality agreement. In free afl consulting, I own the information I provide and I'm free to disclose or use it in any way I see fit. Secondly, I will only provide this service as time allows and will be more likely be slower in responding. There is no deadline and no promises. Thirdly, I might not implement the requirements in full if I already have a similar solution I have implemented before or if two customers have similar requirements. I might only implement the combined requirement.
I hope it is a win win rather than completely altruistic. Firstly, I get to implement a wider range of requirements which would help my own skill while the receipiant get a freebie. Secondly, I hope that people who use the free service will some day use my professional service when the need arises because they like what I provide.
I often get requests privately so I thought I'll throw it into the open to see if there are wider interests.
Thanks for the endorsement Brian.
--- In amibroker@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, "brian_z111" <brian_z111@xxx> wrote:
>
> > I'm thinking about starting a free afl consulting service to bridge >the gap between simple questions and answers on this board and a >full blown professional paid consultancy. If you have a well defined >problem, and you dont want the full confidentiality of a >professional consulting service. You could consider this.
>
> That would be awesome .... incredibly altruistic.... people will be beating a path to your door. In my experience <5% on the net are givers at any point in time (most are too busy with jobs/family etc).
>
> You would put Graham out of business though!
>
> As an aside .... I am predicting that within a decade an open source stockmarket program will be in the top 5 list ... I think I know which one it will be too.
>
> You can't beat the power of open community effort ... the verdict is already in.
>
>
>
>
> --- In amibroker@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, "Paul Ho" <paul.tsho@> wrote:
> >
> > A few points to consider
> > 1. Use the code wizard as your teacher when you're new
> > 2. In our country, we spend 12 years of our lives in basic education, and yet in afl learning, we expect success in weeks. Give yourself time.
> > 3. Ask specific questions, but be prepared to do most of the work. Think about the amount of work you want someone else to do for you in order to help, is that in proportion to the efforts you put in? If you ask earnest questions, you will get earnest answers.
> > 4. I'm thinking about starting a free afl consulting service to bridge the gap between simple questions and answers on this board and a full blown professional paid consultancy. If you have a well defined problem, and you dont want the full confidentiality of a professional consulting service. You could consider this.
> > Paul.
> > --- In amibroker@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, "brian_z111" <brian_z111@> wrote:
> > >
> > > Louies88,
> > >
> > > We took the discussion a lot further than you required ... I hope we didn't confuse you.
> > >
> > > I have been involved in ongoing discussions over training issues, in the forum, and with Tomasz, ever since I joined the forum (others have been involved since before my time).
> > >
> > > As you can see, some of us are a little passionate over the subject.
> > >
> > > Tomasz has introduced a lot of 'training' features over the last 3 years.
> > >
> > > A few important points we forgot to mention:
> > >
> > > - most of the people who are intent on becoming experts with AFL take the posts from this board, as emails, and save them in a threaded emailer to build up a referenced database ... many of them have years of categorized threads.
> > >
> > > - re an AFL book ..... Tomasz has actually written an AFL book ... it comprises everything under AmiBroker Formula Language in the help manual. The fact that people like me are arguing with Tomsasz about the fine print creates the impression that 'The Book' isn't good ... that isn't true ... it is quite good and if you keep going back to it AND gradually learn it, especially the functions, in detail, you will learn an awful lot about programming in AFL i.e. the function reference forms the bulk of 'The Book'.
> > >
> > > - everyone specializes ... no two traders agree on anything very often ..... if and when you want to specialize there are experts in the forum on a wide range of subjects (AFL, stats for traders, otpimization, data, autotrading etc).
> > >
> > > - IMO you have to give yourself permission not to learn it all and don't feel intimidated because you are not proficient in all of the fields that a trader can specialize in.
> > >
> > >
> > > No one is always right.
> > >
> > > After the discussion I haven't chnaged my position very much, if at all, and Tomasz probably feels exactly the same way ... I did learn some more about AFL though.
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > > --- In amibroker@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, "louies88" <Louies88@> wrote:
> > > >
> > > > I think Amibroker is great, especially its AFL. Although I don't know enough about it to claim that it's superior than most other scripting languages out there, I know for a fact that this is one of the best. That also begs the question of how a person w/ virtually no programming background can get started w/ AFL. I followed this forum long enough to note that some of you in here are excellent coders. The codes that I often see are flawless and eloquent, which then makes me think how long does it take a coding newbie such as myself to attain that coding level.
> > > >
> > > > I look at it this way. Coding a computer language is pretty similar to learning a foreign language. I remember how my first English class went. I started out by learning a few basic vocabulary words, then use some of it in the form of a noun, then a verb, finally an object. Sentence structures, or in computer language better known as syntax, govern if a sentence is grammatically correct or if it's not. With that in mind, I also started out by looking at the AFL Library in Amibroker. I downloaded all of the functions in the hope of building myself an Amibroker vocabulary and started to put some of the basic vocabulary words together to make a "sentence."
> > > >
> > > > However, since there isn't any kind of document FORMALLY teaching the ABC of coding in Amibroker, I'm left w/ a question how does Amibroker syntax work? Some of the experienced coders here often compare AFL syntax to that of C++. But for a person w/ neither background in AFL or C++ or any other computer langugae, the question remains: How do I get start? Where's the square one?
> > > >
> > > > Anybody w/ such experience is highly appreciated if he/she's willing to shed a light on this.
> > > >
> > > >
> > > > Thanks
> > > >
> > >
> >
>
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