glgene 616 posts msg #36512 - Ignore glgene |
6/27/2005 12:40:28 PM
According to help messages in SF, T3 Moving Average "is a smoothing technique that is intended to produce more effective and accurate signals."
And here is the example shown:
"Show stocks where close has been above T3(5,0.7) for the last 2 days"
My question: What does the (5,0.7) mean? I don't have a clue.
GL Gene
|
glgene 616 posts msg #36524 - Ignore glgene |
6/27/2005 4:45:05 PM
Did some research on my T3 moving average question:
The variable, "Hot", is a damping coefficient which is set to
the suggested default value of 0.7. Hot???
The 5, I assume, means the number of days in the moving average. Change it to a lesser amount, and you'll find fewer matches (and vice versa).
I think some type of MA crossover might make sense, using T3.
GL Gene
|
MODERATOR 28 posts msg #36664 - Ignore MODERATOR |
7/2/2005 8:29:30 PM
This message has been removed by StockFetcher.
|
MODERATOR 28 posts msg #36675 - Ignore MODERATOR |
7/3/2005 2:26:44 AM
This message has been removed by StockFetcher.
|