INVITE-ONLY SCRIPT
Soren test 2

Me cool u bad
Say we use strategy.risk.allow_entry_in() to only trade longs. When our script uses the strategy.entry() function to open a short trade, TradingView of course won’t allow our strategy to go short. But that doesn’t mean the trade is ignored. Instead the ‘enter short’ trade – which is actually a sell command – becomes an ‘exit long’ order.
Another way to think about this is the following. The strategy.entry() function can reverse positions: longs into shorts, and shorts into longs. That reverse behaviour gets stopped by strategy.risk.allow_entry_in(). What strategy.entry() instead ends doing is close positions: from long to flat, or from short to flat.
(The example strategies that we discuss later in this article show how strategy.risk.allow_entry_in() makes strategy.entry() close instead of open trades.)
Say we use strategy.risk.allow_entry_in() to only trade longs. When our script uses the strategy.entry() function to open a short trade, TradingView of course won’t allow our strategy to go short. But that doesn’t mean the trade is ignored. Instead the ‘enter short’ trade – which is actually a sell command – becomes an ‘exit long’ order.
Another way to think about this is the following. The strategy.entry() function can reverse positions: longs into shorts, and shorts into longs. That reverse behaviour gets stopped by strategy.risk.allow_entry_in(). What strategy.entry() instead ends doing is close positions: from long to flat, or from short to flat.
(The example strategies that we discuss later in this article show how strategy.risk.allow_entry_in() makes strategy.entry() close instead of open trades.)
Say we use strategy.risk.allow_entry_in() to only trade longs. When our script uses the strategy.entry() function to open a short trade, TradingView of course won’t allow our strategy to go short. But that doesn’t mean the trade is ignored. Instead the ‘enter short’ trade – which is actually a sell command – becomes an ‘exit long’ order.
Another way to think about this is the following. The strategy.entry() function can reverse positions: longs into shorts, and shorts into longs. That reverse behaviour gets stopped by strategy.risk.allow_entry_in(). What strategy.entry() instead ends doing is close positions: from long to flat, or from short to flat.
(The example strategies that we discuss later in this article show how strategy.risk.allow_entry_in() makes strategy.entry() close instead of open trades.)Say we use strategy.risk.allow_entry_in() to only trade longs. When our script uses the strategy.entry() function to open a short trade, TradingView of course won’t allow our strategy to go short. But that doesn’t mean the trade is ignored. Instead the ‘enter short’ trade – which is actually a sell command – becomes an ‘exit long’ order.
Another way to think about this is the following. The strategy.entry() function can reverse positions: longs into shorts, and shorts into longs. That reverse behaviour gets stopped by strategy.risk.allow_entry_in(). What strategy.entry() instead ends doing is close positions: from long to flat, or from short to flat.
(The example strategies that we discuss later in this article show how strategy.risk.allow_entry_in() makes strategy.entry() close instead of open trades.)
Say we use strategy.risk.allow_entry_in() to only trade longs. When our script uses the strategy.entry() function to open a short trade, TradingView of course won’t allow our strategy to go short. But that doesn’t mean the trade is ignored. Instead the ‘enter short’ trade – which is actually a sell command – becomes an ‘exit long’ order.
Another way to think about this is the following. The strategy.entry() function can reverse positions: longs into shorts, and shorts into longs. That reverse behaviour gets stopped by strategy.risk.allow_entry_in(). What strategy.entry() instead ends doing is close positions: from long to flat, or from short to flat.
(The example strategies that we discuss later in this article show how strategy.risk.allow_entry_in() makes strategy.entry() close instead of open trades.)
Say we use strategy.risk.allow_entry_in() to only trade longs. When our script uses the strategy.entry() function to open a short trade, TradingView of course won’t allow our strategy to go short. But that doesn’t mean the trade is ignored. Instead the ‘enter short’ trade – which is actually a sell command – becomes an ‘exit long’ order.
Another way to think about this is the following. The strategy.entry() function can reverse positions: longs into shorts, and shorts into longs. That reverse behaviour gets stopped by strategy.risk.allow_entry_in(). What strategy.entry() instead ends doing is close positions: from long to flat, or from short to flat.
(The example strategies that we discuss later in this article show how strategy.risk.allow_entry_in() makes strategy.entry() close instead of open trades.)
Say we use strategy.risk.allow_entry_in() to only trade longs. When our script uses the strategy.entry() function to open a short trade, TradingView of course won’t allow our strategy to go short. But that doesn’t mean the trade is ignored. Instead the ‘enter short’ trade – which is actually a sell command – becomes an ‘exit long’ order.
Another way to think about this is the following. The strategy.entry() function can reverse positions: longs into shorts, and shorts into longs. That reverse behaviour gets stopped by strategy.risk.allow_entry_in(). What strategy.entry() instead ends doing is close positions: from long to flat, or from short to flat.
(The example strategies that we discuss later in this article show how strategy.risk.allow_entry_in() makes strategy.entry() close instead of open trades.)Say we use strategy.risk.allow_entry_in() to only trade longs. When our script uses the strategy.entry() function to open a short trade, TradingView of course won’t allow our strategy to go short. But that doesn’t mean the trade is ignored. Instead the ‘enter short’ trade – which is actually a sell command – becomes an ‘exit long’ order.
Another way to think about this is the following. The strategy.entry() function can reverse positions: longs into shorts, and shorts into longs. That reverse behaviour gets stopped by strategy.risk.allow_entry_in(). What strategy.entry() instead ends doing is close positions: from long to flat, or from short to flat.
(The example strategies that we discuss later in this article show how strategy.risk.allow_entry_in() makes strategy.entry() close instead of open trades.)
招待専用スクリプト
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スクリプトの機能を理解し、その作者を全面的に信頼しているのでなければ、お金を支払ってまでそのスクリプトを利用することをTradingViewとしては「非推奨」としています。コミュニティスクリプトの中で、その代わりとなる無料かつオープンソースのスクリプトを見つけられる可能性もあります。
作者の指示
Say we use strategy.risk.allow_entry_in() to only trade longs. When our script uses the strategy.entry() function to open a short trade, TradingView of course won’t allow our strategy to go short. But that doesn’t mean the trade is ignored. Instead the ‘e
免責事項
これらの情報および投稿は、TradingViewが提供または保証する金融、投資、取引、またはその他の種類のアドバイスや推奨を意図したものではなく、またそのようなものでもありません。詳しくは利用規約をご覧ください。
招待専用スクリプト
こちらのスクリプトにアクセスできるのは投稿者が承認したユーザーだけです。投稿者にリクエストして使用許可を得る必要があります。通常の場合、支払い後に許可されます。詳細については、以下、作者の指示をお読みになるか、sorentinに直接ご連絡ください。
スクリプトの機能を理解し、その作者を全面的に信頼しているのでなければ、お金を支払ってまでそのスクリプトを利用することをTradingViewとしては「非推奨」としています。コミュニティスクリプトの中で、その代わりとなる無料かつオープンソースのスクリプトを見つけられる可能性もあります。
作者の指示
Say we use strategy.risk.allow_entry_in() to only trade longs. When our script uses the strategy.entry() function to open a short trade, TradingView of course won’t allow our strategy to go short. But that doesn’t mean the trade is ignored. Instead the ‘e
免責事項
これらの情報および投稿は、TradingViewが提供または保証する金融、投資、取引、またはその他の種類のアドバイスや推奨を意図したものではなく、またそのようなものでもありません。詳しくは利用規約をご覧ください。