| glgene 618 posts
 msg #96879
 - Ignore glgene
 | 10/12/2010 11:51:16 PM 
 For anyone who is reading this for the first time, please note:
 
 Day-end position of 1.00 means the stock closed at the high of the day
 
 Day-end position of 0.00 means the stock closed at the low of the day.
 
 Anything in between means stock didn't close at high or low of the day.  A higher number (e.g. .80 vs. .35) is better if you're looking for 'long' strength.
 
 
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| four 5,087 posts
 msg #96880
 - Ignore four
 | 10/12/2010 11:53:23 PM 
 
 
 
 
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| glgene 618 posts
 msg #96882
 - Ignore glgene
 | 10/13/2010 12:09:05 AM 
 four,
 
 Your end-of-day run on 10-12-2010 shows EEM with an day-end position of 99.78%.  I show 83%.   ???   If yours is correct, that might explain my scripting logic on a stock that loses on a given day.  If mine is correct, ????
 
 Anyone else?
 
 
 
 
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| glgene 618 posts
 msg #96884
 - Ignore glgene
 | 10/13/2010 12:49:31 AM 
 four,
 
 After seeing your post and manually checking both of our scripts, I concede that yours is correct (at least with stocks that rise in a given day).  Thanks for your correctness.  Still not sure about a stock that loses in a day.   ???
 
 
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| traderseb 36 posts
 msg #96886
 - Ignore traderseb
 | 10/13/2010 7:49:23 AM 
 Try this:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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| four 5,087 posts
 msg #96899
 - Ignore four
 | 10/13/2010 12:27:26 PM 
 TRY...
 
 
 
 
 
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| traderseb 36 posts
 msg #96917
 - Ignore traderseb
 | 10/14/2010 6:32:49 AM 
 Yes, that is the way I would do it if I enjoyed adding extraneous lines of code and wasting set statement resources.
 
 
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