There is a book used by many community colleges in self study C++ courses that 
would probably work for many - C++ Demystified (A Self-Teaching Guide).

Bill
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Ted Byers 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: December 03, 2009 3:46 PM
  Subject: Re: [amibroker] Re: please read this formula and tell what it is?







  On Thu, Dec 3, 2009 at 2:56 PM, Mike <[email protected]> wrote:

      
    Ted,

    AFL is like C++ only in the sense that C++ is like C. All of what you have 
helpfully described exists in C, without need of any of the object oriented 
constructs of C++.




  True enough.


    Studying C++ would probably confuse a non programmer. If opting to study 
another language, I suspect that C would be the better choice.




  C would certainly be much simpler as an introduction but good luck finding a 
decent introductory book talking only about C.  I haven't seen one in what 
seems like eons.  I have several books on C, but wouldn't recommend any of 
them, particularly for non programmers.  The books I like best for an 
introductory course in programming happen to be written to introduce C++.  
Although I use Java for often these days than C++ (for web applications), I 
have yet to find a good introductory text that uses it.  All the really good 
Java books I have found assume the reader already has a solid programming 
background.

  A day or two ago, I found something on the AmiBroker site, I think referring 
to advanced use of AmiBroker in back testing, that includes some discussion of, 
and a very simplistic description of, object oriented programming.  I have not 
examined AFL enough to know if it includes support for defining classes, or if 
the extent of object oriented programming is limited to the use of predefined 
objects, but either way, I think exposure to the object oriented constructs of 
C++ would help in understanding that material, particularly if a well written 
and well designed (from the perspective of instructional systems design) book 
like that written by Koenig and Moo is used.

  On a side note, on reading that object oriented material, I began to wonder 
if one could use the back testing object to support meta-analyses, or if that 
object is implemented as a singleton.  What I mean is this.  Suppose you have a 
function of several parameters that implements a trading system you want to 
test (say one that chooses between trend following and mean reversion based on 
the directional index being above or below some threshold, represented in on of 
the parameters you want to optimize and some measure of volatility being above 
or below some other threshold, in another of the parameters you want to 
optimize).  Then suppose you want to do apply a walk forward optimization, 
applying the result of a given optimization on some sample to an out of sample 
period immediately following.  My question is, can you make use of a second (or 
higher) level of optimzation where, for example, the parameters to optimize are 
the respective lengths of the in sample and out of sample periods?  And if the 
answer to that is yes, can one do the walk-forward procedure on that level too, 
so the algorithm one ends up with can adapt to whatever change may happen in 
the underlying model system as new data arrives.  I know exactly how I'd do 
that in C++ using a blend of object oriented program with generic programming 
and a bit of template metaprogramming thrown in.  But can I do it in AFL?

  Cheers,

  Ted
   
    And yes, using IIF would be more efficient than a loop.

    Mike

    --- In [email protected], Ted Byers <r.ted.by...@...> wrote:


    >
    > On Thu, Dec 3, 2009 at 1:15 PM, bistrader <bistra...@...> wrote:
    > 
    > >
    > >
    > > i is element of array; i++ is counter for "for" statement. Loop goes 
thru
    > > all values. Better, in my opinion, is iff as defined below.
    > >
    > > Not quite.
    > 
    > If you're going to write a program or script, you have to be more precise
    > than that. 'i' is not an element of the array. Rather it is an index
    > referring to an element of the array (the precise concept of what 'i' is
    > depends on what programming language you're using, but what I have given
    > here is good enough for someone beginning his exposure to programming 
using
    > AFL). 'i++' is not a counter. Rather it is a statement applying the unary
    > operator '++' to the index 'i'. It is correct, though, that it loops
    > through all the elements of the array.
    > 
    > A for loop in AFL (and in C++ and Java and a number of related languages)
    > has a structure you need to understand. That is "for (initialization code 
;
    > test ; end code)". You can see that in action in your example. "i = 0"
    > creates and initializes your index variable. "i < *BarCount"* verifies 
that
    > 'i' always has a value less than 'BarCount'. If this test fails (returns
    > false) the expression 'Close[i]' would refer to an element that is not in
    > the array. This test, therefore, ensures that the loop operates only on
    > elements that really exist in the array. The end code 'i++' increments the
    > value of 'i' by one after all the work in the loop is complete, and
    > basically restarts the loop with the incremented value of 'i' (so once it 
is
    > finished with one element in the array it can work on the next). This 
keeps
    > going until 'i' has the same value as 'BarCount - 1' . At the end of the
    > loop where 'i' has that value, it is given the value 'BarCount', and the
    > test fails. At that point, execution resums on the next executable
    > statement after that body of the loop.
    > 
    > I could be wrong, but my impression on a first examination of AFL is that 
a
    > large proportion of the syntax and semantics of AFL is borrowed from C++.
    > If 'learner' is unfamiliar with programming, any introductory text on C++
    > may be helpful in understanding more fully AFL. Having had some experience
    > teaching software engineering, I would not regard the documentation 
provided
    > with AmiBroker or in the books related to it as a suitable introduction to
    > programming using AFL (rather, those seem more appropriate as a reference
    > for someone who is already a reasonably proficient programmer). If the
    > developers of AmiBroker are inclined to accept advice from someone like 
me,
    > I'd suggest an extra book that would take the description of AFL, provided
    > in the Introduction to AmiBroker, and expand it into a book that could 
serve
    > as an introductory programming book that happens to use AFL (using one of
    > Stroustrup's books on C++, or Koenig and Moo's book on C++ as a model).
    > 
    > I won't comment on the relative benefit of the function 'iff' as I have 
not
    > tested it or executed benchmarks using it.
    > 
    > HTH
    > 
    > Ted
    > 
    > 
    > >

    > > --- In [email protected] <amibroker%40yahoogroups.com>, "Ton

    > > Sieverding" <ton.sieverding@> wrote:
    > > >
    > > > What about :
    > > >
    > > > color = iif(C>0,colorgreen,colorred);
    > > >
    > > > Regards, Ton.
    > > >
    > > > ----- Original Message -----
    > > > From: Joe Landry

    > > > To: [email protected] <amibroker%40yahoogroups.com>
    > > > Sent: Thursday, December 03, 2009 3:28 PM
    > > > Subject: Re: [amibroker] please read this formula and tell what it is?
    > > >
    > > >
    > > >
    > > >
    > > > Is this a test?
    > > > Joe
    > > > ----- Original Message -----
    > > > From: learner

    > > > To: [email protected] <amibroker%40yahoogroups.com>
    > > > Sent: Thursday, December 03, 2009 8:12 AM
    > > > Subject: [amibroker] please read this formula and tell what it is?
    > > >
    > > >
    > > >
    > > > for( i = 0; i < BarCount; i++ )
    > > > {
    > > > if( Close[ i ] > Open[ i ] ) // CORRECT
    > > > Color[ i ] = colorGreen;
    > > > else
    > > > Color[ i ] = colorRed;
    > > > }
    > > >
    > > >
    > > >
    > > >
    > > >
    > > > please read above formula and tell me what is i and i++
    > > > what it does exactly?
    > > > thankyou for support
    > > >
    > >
    > > 
    > >
    > 
    > 
    > 

    > -- 
    > R.E.(Ted) Byers, Ph.D.,Ed.D.

    > t...@...

    > CTO
    > Merchant Services Corp.
    > 350 Harry Walker Parkway North, Suite 8
    > Newmarket, Ontario
    > L3Y 8L3
    >





  -- 
  R.E.(Ted) Byers, Ph.D.,Ed.D.
  [email protected]
  CTO
  Merchant Services Corp.
  350 Harry Walker Parkway North, Suite 8
  Newmarket, Ontario
  L3Y 8L3



  

Reply via email to