🌲 #newfeature Change to `input()`'s `type = input.resolution` widget A new feature of the resolution widget allows the selection of the chart's timeframe ("Same as Symbol"). This code shows how to use it, including how to make the chart's resolution the default.
It is no longer necessary to use the previous acrobatics required to include "No Higher Timeframe" as an option for users of our scripts:
//@version=4 study("type = input.resolution", "", true) r_ = input("", type = input.resolution) r = r_ == "" ? timeframe.period : r_ c = security(syminfo.tickerid, r, close) plot(c)
🌲 #newfeature Change to `input()`'s `type = input.resolution` widget A new feature of the resolution widget allows the selection of the chart's timeframe ("Same as Symbol"). This code shows how to use it, including how to make the chart's resolution the default.
It is no longer necessary to use the previous acrobatics required to include "No Higher Timeframe" as an option for users of our scripts:
//@version=4 study("type = input.resolution", "", true) r_ = input("", type = input.resolution) r = r_ == "" ? timeframe.period : r_ c = security(syminfo.tickerid, r, close) plot(c)
The lead from Wall Street offers little clarity as the major averages opened lower on Friday and then bounced back and forth across the unchanged line, finally finishing mixed and little changed.The Dow added 33.18 points or 0.10 percent to finish at 34,798.00, while the NASDAQ eased 4.54 points or 0.03 percent to close at 15,047.70 and the S&P 500 rose 6.50 points or 0.15 percent to end at 4,455.48. For the week, the Dow rose 0.6 percent, the NASDAQ added 0.1 percent and the S&P gained 0.5 percent.The lackluster performance on Wall Street came on uncertainty about the outlook for the markets following recent volatility.
The SSE was the first modern stock exchange to open in China, with trading commencing in 1990. It has now grown to become the largest stock exchange in Asia and the third-largest in the world by market capitalization, which stood at RMB 50.6 trillion (US$7.8 trillion) as of September 2021. Stocks (both A-shares and B-shares), bonds, funds, and derivatives are traded on the exchange. The SEE has two trading boards, the Main Board and the Science and Technology Innovation Board, the latter more commonly known as the STAR Market. The Main Board mainly hosts large, well-established Chinese companies and lists both A-shares and B-shares.