Using part of my blog post for sharing both the rationale and what is needed.
For quite sometime now, I had been thinking of how to get a stock ticker working in GNU/Linux. I know and knew lot of large financial institutions use GNU/Linux as finances are secrets and GNU/Linux is or can be great at keeping secrets. Hence I was under probably the false impression, I would just need to go to github or some code-sharing place and somebody would already have done something. For self-security as I’m a freelancer (we don’t have pensions in our part of world apart from Government and the defense services) I have invested some money in equities and some in Mutual Funds. Now the Bombay Stock Exchange lists both equities and mutual funds on its exchange. Now tuning on TV and trying to figure out stocks and what they are listing is a major time sink. I don’t need real-time quotes. There are quite a few services which give near-realtime quotes but even they are a bit of overkill for what I have in my mind. I just need a ticker which takes the BSE codes and gives near-realtime quotes and displays it in the ticker. Joey Hess made one and its lying orphaned in debian. That doesn’t really work for me. I did try the example as given by joeyh in /usr/share/doc/ticker/examples$ cat sysinfo-ticker while it works on the console on the upper part, I need it to be more of a stand-alone ticker which scrolls at the bottom near the bottom panel. Brownie points if it’s able to store the output to another .json file along with IST time-stamp. Better if it’s also able to share the volume of trade. BSE does give all this info. for free in near-realtime quotes as money is made by big punters who do real-time purchase and sale within the working day itself. Just to check out the competition, I did a search-engine fu search to see if there is a ticker for MS-Windows and somebody already made it. https://bse-nse-stock-ticker.apponic.com/ If this is made possible and maybe at some future date might do a gnuplot once enough data is there. For the data part, there are two competing services so it might be possible to use one as primary source and the other as secondary or fallback resource. http://www.apidatafeed.com/product/equity https://www.quandl.com/data/BSE-Bombay-Stock-Exchange As shared, I did scour github.com but not sourceforge.net, mercurial or the hundred of code-sharing sites. I did however try our different keywords and re-arrangement of keywords in search-engines in the hopes I get a foss BSE sticker but didn't hit anything. I did see another one at jstock.org and https://github.com/yccheok/jstock but github.com software doesn't give any instructions for self-compile or/and testing. Also don't implicitly trust random .bin files. While I don't really care whether it's written in ruby, python, openjdk or some other fancy computer language as Debian has most other languages covered (only exceptions are C# and Oracle Java, won't run them) FWIW, I am only looking for GPL, AGPL or any of the licenses listed on https://www.debian.org/legal/licenses/ although do prefer GPL, AGPL or Modified BSD License as these are the most common types of licenses I have worked it. If any students do attempt to do it, would suggest looking at how joeyh has done with the ticker before trying their own. -- Regards, Shirish Agarwal शिरीष अग्रवाल My quotes in this email licensed under CC 3.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ http://flossexperiences.wordpress.com EB80 462B 08E1 A0DE A73A 2C2F 9F3D C7A4 E1C4 D2D8 _______________________________________________ plug-mail mailing list [email protected] http://list.plug.org.in/listinfo/plug-mail
