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I once asked a teacher a question - where does the oscillation for the initial start of a transistor auto-generator come from? A long time ago. He said that circuit noise initialises the oscillator unless a special start is applied. There could probably be a similar analogy here, i.e. it's possible that nothing should happen, just that an imperfect information system might cause a shift by one or more ticks.
...And if an order is for example one contract and its holder deletes it, there will be a tick to the next price with the order, without the fact of buying or selling. ...
...You see how many questions immediately come up if you accept that a tick is a change.Sorry for the lateness, I was not able to write on the forum.
I want to bring you back to this post.
An assumption was made here after which the whole dialogue went haywire.
There is an important detail missing. The price change occurs in the tick. Bids that are in the put have a freeze directive. So you can't change the deletion or otherwise affect the request in the set. The market request is moved on the basis of the data that is already in the market cup. By moving the market maker moves the market price, and new bids enter the market. Thus, all further discussion of"what happens if I remove the request, how it will affect the movement of prices" is meaningless. If you can delete it, it does not matter. If it can, it means you will not be able to delete the order.
Deleting applications is possible and necessary. What else could it be.
It's curious to hear such arguments. Ask can overlap bid and vice versa. I have seen this, but only on one occasion, before the opening of trading on the mfb. when you can place bids but cannot trade yet.
In the morning
Only if they are outside the cup, and as a consequence cannot influence pricing.
Prove
Prove what? That the bot doesn't see outside the market or that bids outside the market don't affect the pricing?
The fact that in the market an order that was previously set cannot be withdrawn due to its visibility in the market
No I can't, I have to believe it. Neither you nor I have access to the Market Maker's market, we are not talking about the brokerage market (it's a virtual machine).