[QUESTION] - Backtesting Advice For a Beginner With No Coding Experience

C'Mon Blue, give him the deeper meaning and mystery of how 7+1=10? Hit'em in the hine!

He's already missed 1+10-10+1=2, or its trading equivalent, in his FX journal; I figure life is cruel enough to him as it is. Oh, and his take on options was just... precious. I hope he keeps posting here; trading comedy, especially when unconscious, is in short supply.
 
Wrong.

You're obviously neither a programmer, a statistician, or a mathematician, and you keep digging an ever-deeper hole by making statements that are utterly ludicrous wherever they involve any of those disciplines. I suggest you stop before you make yourself look even worse than you already have.

I am a programmer, statistician and mathematician. Your assumption that no backtesting platforms have either the ability or the desire to detect and steal successful systems is naive. At best.
 
I am a programmer, statistician and mathematician. Your assumption that no backtesting platforms have either the ability or the desire to detect and steal successful systems is naive. At best.

As it happens, so am I. And your assumption - if we're going to assign such things - that all backtesting platforms do so is at least as naive as the false one you've assumed I hold.

Now, you want to actually find out what I think? Or you want to play silly-ass games? I would think the latter would be beneath anyone who can actually think.
 
What does a mathematician or statistician have to do with knowing if a broker has written a piece of code in their closed-source software to steal trader's system?

Anything is possible. Unless you have reverse-engineered the software or have the source code of the software, it's better not to make conclusions.
 
What does a mathematician or statistician have to do with knowing if a broker has written a piece of code in their closed-source software to steal trader's system?

Nothing. But it has everything to do with ridiculous statements made in those domains. Whether a broker has inserted such a piece of code into their platform is a separate discussion; one that is not made better by those ridiculous statements, especially when they're used as "proof".

Anything is possible. Unless you have reverse-engineered the software or have the source code of the software, it's better not to make conclusions.

Agreed - as long as that's applied to all conclusions, whether negative or positive. "Don't know the answer" is not equal to "since we don't know the answer, there must be an evil dark conspiracy that will steal all our money and rape our pets".
 
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