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.)
초대 전용 스크립트
이 스크립트는 작성자가 승인한 사용자만 접근할 수 있습니다. 사용하려면 요청 후 승인을 받아야 하며, 일반적으로 결제 후에 허가가 부여됩니다. 자세한 내용은 아래 작성자의 안내를 따르거나 sorentin에게 직접 문의하세요.
트레이딩뷰는 스크립트의 작동 방식을 충분히 이해하고 작성자를 완전히 신뢰하지 않는 이상, 해당 스크립트에 비용을 지불하거나 사용하는 것을 권장하지 않습니다. 커뮤니티 스크립트에서 무료 오픈소스 대안을 찾아보실 수도 있습니다.
작성자 지시 사항
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
면책사항
해당 정보와 게시물은 금융, 투자, 트레이딩 또는 기타 유형의 조언이나 권장 사항으로 간주되지 않으며, 트레이딩뷰에서 제공하거나 보증하는 것이 아닙니다. 자세한 내용은 이용 약관을 참조하세요.
초대 전용 스크립트
이 스크립트는 작성자가 승인한 사용자만 접근할 수 있습니다. 사용하려면 요청 후 승인을 받아야 하며, 일반적으로 결제 후에 허가가 부여됩니다. 자세한 내용은 아래 작성자의 안내를 따르거나 sorentin에게 직접 문의하세요.
트레이딩뷰는 스크립트의 작동 방식을 충분히 이해하고 작성자를 완전히 신뢰하지 않는 이상, 해당 스크립트에 비용을 지불하거나 사용하는 것을 권장하지 않습니다. 커뮤니티 스크립트에서 무료 오픈소스 대안을 찾아보실 수도 있습니다.
작성자 지시 사항
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
면책사항
해당 정보와 게시물은 금융, 투자, 트레이딩 또는 기타 유형의 조언이나 권장 사항으로 간주되지 않으며, 트레이딩뷰에서 제공하거나 보증하는 것이 아닙니다. 자세한 내용은 이용 약관을 참조하세요.