Exploration to find Bullish Stock based on Stochastic Crossover & 200 Day Moving Average

@sonjoejh, this post is a duplicate of the below!

If you don't get a response to a question you can just simply add to the same post re-requesting someone to help you...

You need to respect the forum rules (you know this already from some of your previous posts)

In this post you wrote:

You should discover yourself whether your code is correct or not. If it's not then you need to try and figure it out yourself before asking other people to give up their time and expertise. I personally am happy to help you but only if you try and help yourself first!

From Tomasz: How to use this site

Before you ask a question in a community, try to find the answer elsewhere. This way you help yourself by stretching your mind and research abilities, and you learn things more thoroughly too. Plus it's good karma.

Always try these avenues first:

  1. Keep troubleshooting . Often we learn that it's easier to give up and ask for help rather than persisting—when we'd get our breakthrough if we'd only delay giving up for another 10 minutes. Respect yourself, go a little further before giving up.
  2. Google , of course. Try at least 3 or 4 searches before you give it up as hopeless.
  3. Mailing lists, forums, and newsgroups . Chances are, you're not the first person on the Earth to have this problem. Luckily we live in an age where we can search the past. Check out these resources next.
  4. Docs . Sometimes they seem impenetrable, but give it a whack. The more you learn, the easier the documentation will be to understand and decipher.
  5. Ask your question—but phrase it differently . Instead of asking your question directly, ask "Has anyone has seen this problem?" or "Can anyone point me in the right direction?" Likely as not, someone will have been there before, and they might know a blog posting or other resource which can help you out. This way, you show you are respectful of their time, and understand your problem is (probably) not unique.

When you do ask a question, try to provide as much background detail as possible.

Moderator comment: Actually these are NOT my words, they come from Skidmore College and I only quoted them as I could not write it better :slight_smile:

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