What do you think of TradersStudio?

What do you think of TradersStudio?

  • Own TradersStudio

    Votes: 25 15.2%
  • I am on the fence, thinking about it but have not decided yet

    Votes: 28 17.0%
  • Looked at TradersStudio but am waiting for real time product

    Votes: 14 8.5%
  • I cannot believe TradersStudio can do what they claim they can do, must be a lie

    Votes: 5 3.0%
  • Looked at it and decided against it

    Votes: 28 17.0%
  • What is TradersStudio?

    Votes: 65 39.4%

  • Total voters
    165
Quote from SuperCruz:

I can only answer the ASCII part. ASCII files are easy to use and handle, as they are simple plain text files where values are separated by commas, they can be imported to Ms-Excel files. I thin most data sets are in the form of plain text, in fact .CSV files of Ms-Excel are plain text files. Regarding TradersStudio, users need to answer this.

Thanks for the info SuperCruz.

Syn
 
Quote from droskill:

I agree completely with what fundjunkie has already posted. I've spent time with TradingBlox - it is an excellent product, but not worth the extra dollars over Tradersstudio imho. But that is not to say that people that are using it have wasted their money - it's definitely one of two best-of-breed tools.

Another bargain I think is also worth mentioning is Amibroker. For $149 or whatever the EOD version costs, it's a great tool. I use AB to prototype systems before moving them over to TS.

Thanks for the answer, droskill. :)

So, as per you and fundjunkie, Amibroker and Tradersstudio are good products. Which one shall be better for me, I do trading at end of day? Also the cost difference is not an issue; as I want to learn one product and be able to use it as I grow.
 
I think you have to figure out which program, from my list, or any other, "talks" to you. I'd start by downloading a trial of AB and see what you think. If that doesn't work for you, then move on....
 
Quote from Derrick1983:

Thanks for the answer, droskill. :)

So, as per you and fundjunkie, Amibroker and Tradersstudio are good products. Which one shall be better for me, I do trading at end of day? Also the cost difference is not an issue; as I want to learn one product and be able to use it as I grow.

I agree with droskill but would add that you appear programming averse (am i right or thinking of someone else who's posted here?). Given that, AmiBroker is probably not the best choice for you. As I understand it, because I am not a user, it is capable but requires extensive programming to capitalize on.

Tradersstudio does have a programming wizard aimed at the code averse. I can't comment on it's usefulness as I've never bothered using it.

Thx
D
 
I'm seriously considering buying TStudio.

TStudio is not a RT product but supports the use of intraday data in it's backtesting. There's a real lack of data providers listed on the TStudio site.

I'm relatively new to data management and so I'd really like to know either from Murray what data feed set ups are possible and from TStudio users what data set ups they are using.

CSI provide EOD data only, i.e. the smallest interval they support is daily. This is less than ideal, i'd want my tests based on intrday data. What intraday data solution(s) for US stocks and futures do Murray and others recommend? I'd also like to know if the stock data solution support data that can be adjusted for splits and divs.

I truely hope there is at least one simple, stable and good value solution...
Syn
 
In addition it would be good to know how easy data feed suggestions are to manage. Is it easy to import lists of lots of stocks, group them by sector etc?

Syn

Quote from Synonym:

I'm seriously considering buying TStudio.

TStudio is not a RT product but supports the use of intraday data in it's backtesting. There's a real lack of data providers listed on the TStudio site.

I'm relatively new to data management and so I'd really like to know either from Murray what data feed set ups are possible and from TStudio users what data set ups they are using.

CSI provide EOD data only, i.e. the smallest interval they support is daily. This is less than ideal, i'd want my tests based on intrday data. What intraday data solution(s) for US stocks and futures do Murray and others recommend? I'd also like to know if the stock data solution support data that can be adjusted for splits and divs.

I truely hope there is at least one simple, stable and good value solution...
Syn
 
Quote from droskill:



I think you have to figure out which program, from my list, or any other, "talks" to you. I'd start by downloading a trial of AB and see what you think. If that doesn't work for you, then move on....



Quote from fundjunkie:



I agree with droskill but would add that you appear programming averse (am i right or thinking of someone else who's posted here?). Given that, AmiBroker is probably not the best choice for you. As I understand it, because I am not a user, it is capable but requires extensive programming to capitalize on.



Tradersstudio does have a programming wizard aimed at the code averse. I can't comment on it's usefulness as I've never bothered using it.



Thx

D



Thanks to you both. Well, I must say that I am no programming fan, though I can learn to do it. But, would like to have something easy to work on, before doing programming.



So, TradersStudio has a programming wizard, please explain. Does it help to write programs?
 
Quote from Derrick1983:

Thanks to you both. Well, I must say that I am no programming fan, though I can learn to do it. But, would like to have something easy to work on, before doing programming.

So, TradersStudio has a programming wizard, please explain. Does it help to write programs?

Derrick1983, this wizard is for people who are not good in programming or do not want to do it. You can create programs by simple "drag and drop" feature. It has templates where you can make programs, and even macros.
 
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