
The Amount tells you how much of the financial instrument (Bitcoin) you said you wanted when you put in a buy or bid order, or tells you how much you said you wanted to sell when you put in an ask or sell order. The Type tells you whether the order was an ask or a bid, which is a goofy way of saying rather or not you put in an order to buy or sell. The Date tells you the date and time the exchange received your order and successfully added it to the orderbook. The orders are logged in the order in which you put them in so all the # tells you is which orders were placed more recently and which ones were placed later. This is a log of your limit orders that have not been executed, or that were just executed and will be removed from the log soon.Įach order has four attributes ‘#’, ‘Date’, ‘Type’, ‘Status’, ‘Amount’, ‘Price’, and ‘Total’.

Your open orders is a lot like what it sounds. The ‘Low’ tells you the lowest price the financial instrument (Bitcoin) sold for that day, and the ‘Volume’ tells you how many Bitcoin in total have been bought and sold so far that day. In the ‘Buy’ column, the first window displays the last price the financial instrument (Bitcoin) sold for. The ‘High’ price tells you the highest price the financial instrument (Bitcoin) was sold for that day, and the ‘Last Price’ tells you the price the last Bitcoin sold for. If you’re looking to sell in a hurry, realistically I would expect to sell at or below this price. Going through the ‘Sell’ column, the first window displays the last sell price the particular financial instrument (in this example Bitcoin) sold for. This is like it’s wired in directly to the matrix. This window gives your real time pricing information continually fetched from your exchange in a fraction of a second. The ‘Market’ info window is another little nuance to Qt Bitcoin Trader that makes it one of my all-time favorite trading programs. If you’ve got plenty of time to buy or sell and small price differences matter to you then the second window may give you more relevant conversion information. So to put things in perspective, if you’re in a position that’s already profitable enough that you’re not worried about a couple nickels and dimes, or you’re in an emergency ‘bail-out’ situation, the first window may give you a more realistic outlook as to what you should hope to receive. The top part tells you how much USD you would receive if you sold your Bitcoin at the last price someone sold Bitcoin for, and the bottom part tells you how much you would receive if you bought Bitcoin at the last price someone bought Bitcoin for. The second window, ‘Total at Last Price’ tells you something very similar but with a little twist. Just below that it tells you how much Bitcoin you would receive if you spent your entire USD balance buying Bitcoin from the the first limit sell order on the orderbook. The first window ‘Total at Buy/Sell Price’ tells you how much USD (in this example) you would receive if you sold your entire Bitcoin balance into the first limit buy order on the orderbook at the top. I included these two windows in one section because they do the same thing but give you an idea of the outcome of different ways you may choose to buy or sell. It’ll probably ask you for some account information you don’t have yet so you’ll want to press the little ‘+’ button next to the ‘Profile’ drop down menu. When you first open the app you’ll be prompted with a screen that looks like the one below. What I find particularly fantastic about this app is its versatility, its unique ‘rules’ feature probably makes it one of the most diverse and powerful tools available to cryptotraders today.

I want to develop this Trader App so that it can be configured for any rule and strategy.Īnd make real time charts on QML or Qt Graphics View. Interface Languages: English, Russian, Ukrainian, Spanish, Dutch, Norwegian, German, Chinese, Polish. Your password must be at least 8 characters and contain letters, digits, and special characters. Real time data monitoring.Īpi key and secret is protected by password using AES 256 encryption. Qt Bitcoin Trader is open source application that helps you open and cancel Mt.Gox, BTC-e, Bitstamp, BTCChina orders very fast. It is a work in progress and will eventually be replaced by another project called Qt Open Trader, the development team is very active and will often add features upon request. Qt Bitcoin Trader was developed by a programmer known as IGHOR on the forums. Qt Bitcoin Trader is one of our favorite trading tools over here at WallStreetCrypto, it’s open source, fast, doesn’t rely on an exchange’s public platform, and best of all, it’s free! To download the program just visit this link and read this article for everything you need to get started using it right away.
