By the way, I found using a combination of QCharts and Esignal together. QCharts offers market analysis as to which stocks are the biggest losers, winners, most volatile, largest range producers, new yearly lows, highs, and so much more. QCharts allow to you know whats going on make your move. Where QCharts leaves off is where Esignal picks up. ESignal allows you to see the actual bid/ask prices on a tick chart. The importance of this bid/ask on a chart is that you not only see the price at which a stock is being traded, but the bid/ask price that is available.
Understand that the price on most trades falls outside the range of the bid/ask and therefore a chart that appeats to have a fast trend might really just be false because the bid/ask prices have not moved as abruptly as the trades.
In short, Esignal allows you to see what price you could place a trade precisely without squinting for Level II windows. In my experience, this setup of QCharts and Esignal are very good. You can't trade with QCharts, and you can't get market analysis with Esignal. Thanks for reading.