Quote from gotta_trade:
Question:
How does a person who's not safisticated in the area of back testing go about doing it?
Do I just put the time and effort in Wealth Lab and figure out?
Is there a Back Testing for Dummies book, or any other book, that would lay a basic foundation for me?
What does TradeStation do? Is it the same type of thing?
Are there other programs and/or websites that serve the same purpose?
Basically, how do I go about learning how to back test different trading ideas? Where do I begin?
Thank You,
gotta_trade
My previous post had troubles and somehow part of it got left out.
Wealth Lab and Tradestation are similar in that both are toolkits and do not do much unless you program them. However, they come with many preprogrammed studies that are useful and serve also as examples.
I use Tradestation, so I will discuss it.
It comes with some good tutorials. They also run seminars in different cities, you have to pay for these. It has a number of support mechanisms. You are able to hire programmers. There is www.tradestationworld.com where there is lot of useful information and forums where you are able to post questions and usually quickly get back very good answers either from TS employees or users.
There are a few books available on programming it.
Also, there are an email discussion listserv, private websites, a Yahoo Group or two, etc where many indicators and other types of studies are available as well as the usual Q&A and BS that goes on in these types of things.
As far as learning, if you have some programming background, it is fairly easy to learn. If not, then you may have a steep learning curve.
Where to start? I seem to remember a discussion on this in one of the other forums and the general consensus was to start by taking a simple idea and program it. As you learn, add complexity. Learning by doing seems best. You might select your platform and take one of the courses (I'm not sure if WealthLab or the others have them.)
I think TS has a free 30 day trial.
Good luck.
DS