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- Retep replied Nov 22, 2021
Thanks guys!
- Retep replied Jun 29, 2021
Hi Paul, You're right, it's absolutely not a walk in the park. Consistent profitable trading is difficult, very difficult and analysing currency strength data doesn't have a huge impact on this fact. It just gives you a little more insight, a whole ...
- Retep replied Jun 29, 2021
Hi guys, I spent years studying, analysing and coding on this topic. The result is on my GitHub repo, the include file CurrencyStrength.mqh, and the indicator CurrencyStrength.mq5 (mq4 outdated). Very creative work, congratulations! However, the ...
- Retep replied Jun 28, 2021
I'm the someone It's actually how you get the percentages. You have no other choice than using percentages, otherwise you would compare apples with oranges, resulting in distorted calculation.
- Retep replied Jun 27, 2021
Pips are differences of real values. Real values are not comparable across the 28 currency pairs, and are therefore mathematically not usable. Do this on each pair: (Close - Open) / Open Now do any math you like with the 28 values, because they are ...
- Retep replied Jun 22, 2021
To analyse currencies and not pairs is a very important approach. To do the math correctly, use fractions (percentages) of changes and not pips. Each pair has a different scale in pips. See my GitHub repo with some tools regarding this topic. An ...
- Retep replied Jun 21, 2021
Sorry, I don't post code or compiled files in this forum. At GitHub I have created a release containing the compiled MT5 Trade Manager. Install the dependencies (include folder) to compile it: errordescription.mqh CurrencyStrength.mqh MultiPivots.mqh ...
- Retep replied Jun 21, 2021
The MT4 version of the Trade Manager has a aggregated view of pairs only. Yes, since about one year I don't support MT4 anymore. I recommend to use MT5, it's simply the better platform. The MT5 version of the Trade Manager has 3 different forms of ...
- Retep replied Mar 5, 2021
Interesting approach. If I understand it correctly, the chart shows the equation of buy AUDNZD and buy EURCHF and buy GBPJPY and buy USDCAD. Or in terms of currencies: Buy AUD, EUR, GBP, USD, and sell NZD, CHF, JPY, CAD. In the list I see some ...
- Retep replied Mar 1, 2021
All currency pairs are mathematically connected to each other. It's crucial to know what you really trade. A currency pair actually includes two markets, the base and the quote currency.
- Retep replied Feb 7, 2021
My Trade Manager could be a starting point for you: url Everybody is invited to add new functionality.
- Retep replied Oct 4, 2020
You're welcome. The datetime has 8 bytes and should be casted to long not int. In our case we cast the result of the division (which is a double) to int. There is a even better solution I didn't know before with the explicit function iBarShift(...) ...
- Retep replied Oct 3, 2020
The compiler directive #property strict makes the difference. The result of the division is a double, it can safely be casted to int. iTime(...) can return 0 if the history is not available, so the if is just checking for such errors. #property ...
- Retep replied Oct 3, 2020
Example: void OnStart() { datetime StartM30 = iTime(NULL,PERIOD_M30,0); datetime StartM5 = iTime(NULL,PERIOD_M5,0); if(StartM30 > 0 && StartM5 > 0) Print("Shift is: " + (StartM5 - StartM30) / PeriodSeconds(PERIOD_M5)); } Cheers Peter
- Retep replied Oct 3, 2020
You don't need a loop for this. And it's not guaranteed that the open price is unique. You just need some math with time. I think you will see the solution with these hints: With iTime(...) or CopyTime(...) you get the open time (seconds) of the ...
- Retep replied Oct 2, 2020
Search for "3 Level ZZ Semafor".