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Gary Wheeler wrote: bring enough to share? Well, Brother Gary,
I really do want to ... bring enough to share ... but so often the picnic-basket Mother Kali gives me when she's ten feet tall is so ... tiny: there's not enough room for even one pig's trotter; and ... you know ... this lot, here, would require a whole passel of swine just for le cours de l'apéritif.
Of course, I am rooting for more, for all of us, constantly, even though, often my snout gets terrible writer's cramps.
«A man will be imprisoned in a room with a door that's unlocked and opens inwards ... as long as it does not occur to him to pull rather than push» Wittgenstein
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Kent Sharkey wrote: What century is this?
Since it is 2558 BE it is the 26th century in this part of the world.
Once you lose your pride the rest is easy.
I would agree with you but then we both would be wrong.
In the end, only three things matter: how much you loved, how gently you lived, and how gracefully you let go of things not meant for you. – Buddha
The report of my death was an exaggeration - Mark Twain
Simply Elegant Designs Jim<</div>
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"An important piece of software for users of this operating system."
That's right - all 3 of them.
/ravi
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It's the open-source century, where what is actually needed by real people is irrelevant, if what you want in your mother's basement differs.
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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Must... not... flashback...
<WarStory>
Once upon a time, I developed a device driver for OS/2. 18,000+ lines of Intel assembly language controlling a custom piece of hardware. I did not grieve when the product was finally end-of-lifed.
</WarStory>
Software Zen: delete this;
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When I saw this post I actually thought it would be another Charlie Hebdo post.
The title was sadly fitting.
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I thought the only places OS/2 was being used was in ATMs.
And that was a while ago...
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Huh? Huh? Maybe? Maybe?
Edit: This isn't an e-peen religious debate. I'm just curious to see if their are any CPians into it.
Jeremy Falcon
modified 7-Jan-15 17:49pm.
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No.
Primarily because it's riskier than the stock market, and the worst that you can lose when investing in the stock market is your original investment.
With FOREX, if the currency situation were to flop in very unfavorable terms for you where the exchange rate was negative for your currency, you would be liable for difference due immediately.
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A negative exchange rate? That hurts my brain...
No market is particularly risky without leverage but the tiny margins on FX trading require huge trades for small returns which, in turn, require large leverage. However a spot-forward pair has a very tightly defined risk. If the rate drifts outside the range you have set then the losses on the one leg are covered by gains on the other and currencies are totally liquid.
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Paul M Watt wrote: Primarily because it's riskier than the stock market, and the worst that you can lose when investing in the stock market is your original investment. I'm not looking for a religious debate, which is what this is. This is wrong on so many levels, but I'll give you a quicky here[^].
Paul M Watt wrote: With FOREX, if the currency situation were to flop in very unfavorable terms for you where the exchange rate was negative for your currency, you would be liable for difference due immediately. Yeah because when you lose money in the stock market, they won't expect their money soon at all. Note the sarcasm.
Jeremy Falcon
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Jeremy Falcon wrote: I'm not looking for a religious debate, which is what this is. This is wrong on so many levels, but...
Fair enough. Besides, I'm agnostic on the subject, probably ignorant too. I don't directly invest in the stock market either, for entirely different reasons (shortages of currency completely unrelated to forex).
Are there other more common ways to end up negative with the stock market? Or are shorting and futures things that most investors participate in as well?
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Paul M Watt wrote: Are there other more common ways to end up negative with the stock market? Tons, ask my brother. But I don't deal with stocks, so I'm not the person to really speak on it. I mean I know the basics, but you get the idea. I'm more of a Forex type of guy.
Paul M Watt wrote: Or are shorting and futures things that most investors participate in as well? Beats me. I've heard of success stories on futures trading on the net, but that's about as much as I know about that.
FWIW, this day and age, it's hard to lose more than you put in, even with Forex. Most brokers have automatic margin calls now, so once the account can no longer fund the trade(s) they get closed out on margin. Of course, losing all your money is still a bad, bad day.
Jeremy Falcon
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Well I've emptied a few[^] with a curry...
But the currency market? No chance!
Nagy is possibly the guy to ask?
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
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OriginalGriff wrote: Nagy is possibly the guy to ask?
@Nagy-Vilmos ?
Jeremy Falcon
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Dats de bunny!
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
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Don't they make condoms?
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Now you understand my interest in it.
Jeremy Falcon
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I know this has nothing to do with Forex, but I recently wrote a small app for my sister that draws the Ichimoku Cloud[^] with automated signals so she can trade options.
The difficult we do right away...
...the impossible takes slightly longer.
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I have been into writing FX robots for a few years now (part time along with work), although I did take a break from watching the markets for personal business last year.
I used to use the MQL4 (Meta Trader 4 Platform Language) but do not want to have to keep a computer running at home because in this part of the world (SE Asia) the electrical supply can be erratic and I may not know when I take a hit at home and my robots are not monitoring when to exit open trades.
My New Years resolution is to develop a service based architecture running on a hosting platform that I can set up to automatically trade using existing servers for which I have accounts.
All of my trading so far has been on practice accounts. I haven't yet been able to get a good return from a robot but am determined to continue until I do.
I seem to get into trades at the right time but need to work on trailing stop and exit strategy. I stop out a lot so I am looking at longer time frames with a larger stop loss to give the trade room to breathe.
Do you do any automated trading or use EAs?
Once you lose your pride the rest is easy.
I would agree with you but then we both would be wrong.
In the end, only three things matter: how much you loved, how gently you lived, and how gracefully you let go of things not meant for you. – Buddha
The report of my death was an exaggeration - Mark Twain
Simply Elegant Designs Jim<</div>
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JimmyRopes wrote: Do you do any automated trading or use EAs?
I don't automate it in the form of a robot, but I did write my own MT4 indicator to handle the basics of what I need to manage my assets. So far, I feel the best way to handle the market is to follow the psychology behind it. So, I still manually enter positions. Always will, but I do at least make it as easy as possible with my indy and app I'm working on. Just still want to click that "Go" button myself.
JimmyRopes wrote: I seem to get into trades at the right time but need to work on trailing stop and exit strategy. I stop out a lot so I am looking at longer time frames with a larger stop loss to give the trade room to breathe.
I could talk for hours on this, but yeah. At some point it becomes art. As a rule of thumb, as a default stop I use half a 7 period ATR, but I generally make sure my stop is places over and under the recent swings in the market so I don't get stopped out too much.
JimmyRopes wrote: All of my trading so far has been on practice accounts.
You totally gotta give live trading a go. You can open an account with just a couple hundred bucks. Just don't forget money management. If you want my MT4 indy to help with that I'll email it to you. But, it's a lot of a mind game. Nothing prepares you for winning and losing real money outside of jumping in the deep end and winning and losing real money. And it's best to learn the market with manual practice even if you did code a magical robot to do it. You need to understand what to really code ya know.
Jeremy Falcon
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Jeremy Falcon wrote: I still manually enter positions. Always will, but I do at least make it as easy as possible with my indy and app I'm working on. Just still want to click that "Go" button myself.
Yes, a lot of people want the final say before entering a trade. I am trying to eliminate human emotion from trading, but it is hard to have enough confidence in a system to just let it go do what it does without human intervention.
Jeremy Falcon wrote: as a default stop I use half a 7 period ATR, but I generally make sure my stop is places over and under the recent swings in the market so I don't get stopped out too much
At one point I was using half the 7 period ATR also but I didn't look for recent highs or lows in combination with it. I will have to look into that again once I get the system up on a hosting server.
How many periods should I track to be reasonably assured I am seeing the current support or resistance level?
Do you use Bollinger bands and/or Fibonacci retracement levels to determine support or resistance? I am currently trying out Bollinger bands. I like the way they are dynamic and not just a fixed number. Having said that because so many people use Fibs they seem to become self fulfilling support or resistance levels.
Jeremy Falcon wrote: You totally gotta give live trading a go.
Yes, I have been told that before. Most people say it is different emotionally than demo trading.
Since I am trying to totally eliminate human emotion I don't know if it will be different for me.
I do plan to go live once I get a system working well.
Jeremy Falcon wrote: If you want my MT4 indy to help with that I'll email it to you.
Yes I would like to see what you have done. I am always open to new ideas about tracking the markets. I am curious to see if you EMAs or SMAs. That is if you use MAs at all.
I usually use EMAs because they are weighted towards the more current action, but some folks like SMAs. Any insight you have about this would be appreciated.
Jeremy Falcon wrote: Nothing prepares you for winning and losing real money outside of jumping in the deep end and winning and losing real money.
I know what you are saying, but I don't feel confident with my current knowledge. There is still a lot of economics I need to learn before I can feel confident with real money.
Once you lose your pride the rest is easy.
I would agree with you but then we both would be wrong.
In the end, only three things matter: how much you loved, how gently you lived, and how gracefully you let go of things not meant for you. – Buddha
Simply Elegant Designs Jim<</xml>
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Nah. Aussie beer's for wusses.
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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