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burak UMITVAR
共享卖家产品Remi Passanello
通用交易平台(UT) 该EA是RPTrade Pro解决方案系统的一部分。 UT是使用趋势和振荡器指标的交易机器人。 它旨在供任何人使用,即使是交易的绝对初学者也可以使用它。 专为每个时间表而设计 用途止盈,止损和尾随止损。 也可以作为不带SL / TP的交换机使用 适用于任何一对 它是如何工作的 UT是趋势追随者。 它使用A内置的超级趋势指标来查找交易条目,并使用抛物线SAR来止损/追踪/折损甚至头寸 TP / SL / TS或下一个相反的交易将停止交易。 不套期保值,不求平均。 在下一个交易开始之前,交易必须结束。 UT控制每个刻度线或每个柱线,可以以实际刻度线或开盘价进行优化。 测试中 在测试之前必须进行优化。专门的支持站点将很快提供完整的描述和指导。 输入项 IsMicroAccount:[布尔] True将最小手数设置为0.01 False将最小手数设置为0.1 CompletedBars:[布尔] True将仅在新的柱线开盘时交易(开盘价模式) 虚假将交易每一刻 GlobalTimeFrame:[ENUM TIMEFRAME]选择整个EA的时间范围
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burak UMITVAR
whats the "IR" deposit added to the demo accounts 1st day of every month. its only a couple of bucks, but whats to purpose it is added to a demo account? anybody knows the reason?
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burak UMITVAR
good work..
Andrey Khatimlianskii
50% gain with Ilan.
For both MT5 (https://www.mql5.com/en/market/product/492) and MT4 (https://www.mql5.com/en/market/product/1332).
Join now!
For both MT5 (https://www.mql5.com/en/market/product/492) and MT4 (https://www.mql5.com/en/market/product/1332).
Join now!

2
burak UMITVAR
The Myth about Autopilot
Let’s assume that a stranger comes up to you while you’re in your garage and tries to sell you a fully automated driving system, “for just a couple hundred dollars, you can get this computer chip which will drive your car for you.” You can just sit and sleep while you are being driven to work. You would probably laugh at such an offer. But would you laugh if someone offered you an automated system for investing in the markets?
Traders who believe in the "autopilot" myth think that making money can be automated. Some try to create automated systems themselves, others try to buy ready-made ones. People who spend years crafting their trades as lawyers, doctors, or business then turn around and try to buy the equivalent of years worth of experience in the form of an automated trading system. These types are generally ruled by greed, laziness and profound misconceptions about mathematics.
In the old days, such systems were written down on scraps of paper; now they are on protected disks. Some are very primitive, others are quite complex with built-in optimizers and rules for money management. Many traders are looking for magic – a way to turn a few lines of code into an endless stream of money. Those who pay for automated trading systems are reminiscent of knights from the middle ages who paid alchemists for the secret of turning simple metals into gold.
Human behavior, with all of its complexity, doesn’t allow itself to be automated. Computer programs haven’t replaced teachers and computer-based accounting systems hasn’t led to mass unemployment among accountants. Most human activities require the ability to make decisions – something computers can help with but can never fully replace humans.
If you had managed to get a hold of an automated system, you could retire to Tahiti and live the rest of your days in luxury, picking up a never-ending stream of checks from your broker. But so far the only people who have made money from automated trading systems are the people who sell them. They have created a small but quite attractive little niche for themselves. If their systems worked, why would they sell them? Instead of hawking their systems, they could have long ago themselves retired to Tahiti. Of course such salesmen have an answer ready. Some say that they like programming more than trading on the market. Others say they are selling their system just to acquire capital for making further investment.
But the market is always changing and what worked yesterday may not work today. A good trader is always correcting his methods when he sees that things are changing. An automated system will be unable to make the necessary adjustment and will inevitably crash and burn.
Take the airlines. Even though they all have autopilot systems in their airplanes, they all nevertheless continue to pay pilots rather large salaries. This is because the pilot, unlike the computer, can deal with an unexpected situation. When a plane flying over the Pacific suffers damage to the fuselage and needs to execute an emergency landing or when a plane flying over Canada unexpectedly runs out of fuel, only a human can deal with such a situation. Trusting your money to an autopilot system is a good way to have your account destroyed by the first unexpected event.
There are good systems out there but they have to be managed and their trades have to be watched. You can’t simply turn it on and let it go.
Let’s assume that a stranger comes up to you while you’re in your garage and tries to sell you a fully automated driving system, “for just a couple hundred dollars, you can get this computer chip which will drive your car for you.” You can just sit and sleep while you are being driven to work. You would probably laugh at such an offer. But would you laugh if someone offered you an automated system for investing in the markets?
Traders who believe in the "autopilot" myth think that making money can be automated. Some try to create automated systems themselves, others try to buy ready-made ones. People who spend years crafting their trades as lawyers, doctors, or business then turn around and try to buy the equivalent of years worth of experience in the form of an automated trading system. These types are generally ruled by greed, laziness and profound misconceptions about mathematics.
In the old days, such systems were written down on scraps of paper; now they are on protected disks. Some are very primitive, others are quite complex with built-in optimizers and rules for money management. Many traders are looking for magic – a way to turn a few lines of code into an endless stream of money. Those who pay for automated trading systems are reminiscent of knights from the middle ages who paid alchemists for the secret of turning simple metals into gold.
Human behavior, with all of its complexity, doesn’t allow itself to be automated. Computer programs haven’t replaced teachers and computer-based accounting systems hasn’t led to mass unemployment among accountants. Most human activities require the ability to make decisions – something computers can help with but can never fully replace humans.
If you had managed to get a hold of an automated system, you could retire to Tahiti and live the rest of your days in luxury, picking up a never-ending stream of checks from your broker. But so far the only people who have made money from automated trading systems are the people who sell them. They have created a small but quite attractive little niche for themselves. If their systems worked, why would they sell them? Instead of hawking their systems, they could have long ago themselves retired to Tahiti. Of course such salesmen have an answer ready. Some say that they like programming more than trading on the market. Others say they are selling their system just to acquire capital for making further investment.
But the market is always changing and what worked yesterday may not work today. A good trader is always correcting his methods when he sees that things are changing. An automated system will be unable to make the necessary adjustment and will inevitably crash and burn.
Take the airlines. Even though they all have autopilot systems in their airplanes, they all nevertheless continue to pay pilots rather large salaries. This is because the pilot, unlike the computer, can deal with an unexpected situation. When a plane flying over the Pacific suffers damage to the fuselage and needs to execute an emergency landing or when a plane flying over Canada unexpectedly runs out of fuel, only a human can deal with such a situation. Trusting your money to an autopilot system is a good way to have your account destroyed by the first unexpected event.
There are good systems out there but they have to be managed and their trades have to be watched. You can’t simply turn it on and let it go.
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