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Using Interactive Brokers with NeoTicker®
This is a series of articles on how to use NeoTicker® with Interactive Brokers to receive data and place orders.
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This is a series of articles on how to use NeoTicker® with Interactive Brokers to receive data and place orders.
Continue Reading…
NT Order Server for IB is a program that acts as a bridge between NeoTicker and Interactive Brokers’ TWS. It is both a data server (real-time and historical data service) and an order server (order placement and position management).
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The native symbology of Interactive Brokers (IB) is cumbersome and confusing. For this reason, NeoTicker® introduces a simplified symbology when you use IB as data feed.
Basically, a NeoTicker® IB symbol consists of the symbol itself, optional exchange and optional currency. When exchange and currency information is not present, NeoTicker® will fill in the information using settings in NeoTicker® Order Server. In another words, you will need to specify the exchange and currency for a symbol if it is different from the default.
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One of the strength of NeoTicker is it works really well with multiple monitors. As a trader, sooner or later you will wish you have more screen real estate. In fact, we have never meet anyone who switches back to using single monitor once they have tried multiple monitors.
NeoTicker download is quite large (~50M). When you download NeoTicker, the possibility of a corrupted download is very real. In our experience, every time we make a release, some support calls come in that can be traced back to bad downloads.
So how can you tell if a download is good or bad? The answer is checksum.
This article talks about how to configure NeoTicker® such that when you place an order, it is sent to IB for execution.
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This article is for users who plan to use Interactive Brokers (IB) to serve data to NeoTicker®, and/or placing order to IB from NeoTicker®.
NeoTicker 4 introduces a very flexible scheme to color data series in the chart. In fact, you can even color data series using formulas. The flexibility means there are many options to choose from, which can be daunting.
This mini tutorial is written to help you get started with data series coloring. The example here is using candlesticks, and is equally applicable if you use bars.