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Python Algorithmic Trading Cookbook

Python Algorithmic Trading Cookbook

By : Dagade
3.8 (10)
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Python Algorithmic Trading Cookbook

Python Algorithmic Trading Cookbook

3.8 (10)
By: Dagade

Overview of this book

If you want to find out how you can build a solid foundation in algorithmic trading using Python, this cookbook is here to help. Starting by setting up the Python environment for trading and connectivity with brokers, you’ll then learn the important aspects of financial markets. As you progress, you’ll learn to fetch financial instruments, query and calculate various types of candles and historical data, and finally, compute and plot technical indicators. Next, you’ll learn how to place various types of orders, such as regular, bracket, and cover orders, and understand their state transitions. Later chapters will cover backtesting, paper trading, and finally real trading for the algorithmic strategies that you've created. You’ll even understand how to automate trading and find the right strategy for making effective decisions that would otherwise be impossible for human traders. By the end of this book, you’ll be able to use Python libraries to conduct key tasks in the algorithmic trading ecosystem. Note: For demonstration, we're using Zerodha, an Indian Stock Market broker. If you're not an Indian resident, you won't be able to use Zerodha and therefore will not be able to test the examples directly. However, you can take inspiration from the book and apply the concepts across your preferred stock market broker of choice.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
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Querying a list of exchanges

An exchange is a marketplace where instruments are traded. Exchanges ensure that the trading process is fair and happens in an orderly fashion at all times. Usually, a broker supports multiple exchanges. This recipe demonstrates how to find the list of exchanges supported by the broker.

Getting ready

Make sure the instruments object is available in your Python namespace. Refer to the second recipe of this chapter to learn how to set up this object.

How to do it…

Display the exchanges supported by the broker:

>>> exchanges = instruments.exchange.unique()
>>> print(exchanges)

You will get the following output:

['BCD' 'BSE' 'NSE' 'CDS' 'MCX' 'NFO']

How it works…

instruments.exchange returns a pandas.Series object. Its unique() method returns a numpy.ndarray object consisting of unique exchanges supported by the broker.

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