Book Image

F# for Quantitative Finance

By : Johan Astborg
Book Image

F# for Quantitative Finance

By: Johan Astborg

Overview of this book

F# is a functional programming language that allows you to write simple code for complex problems. Currently, it is most commonly used in the financial sector. Quantitative finance makes heavy use of mathematics to model various parts of finance in the real world. If you are interested in using F# for your day-to-day work or research in quantitative finance, this book is a must-have.This book will cover everything you need to know about using functional programming for quantitative finance. Using a functional programming language will enable you to concentrate more on the problem itself rather than implementation details. Tutorials and snippets are summarized into an automated trading system throughout the book.This book will introduce you to F#, using Visual Studio, and provide examples with functional programming and finance combined. The book also covers topics such as downloading, visualizing and calculating statistics from data. F# is a first class programming language for the financial domain.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
F# for Quantitative Finance
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Building the GUI


The GUI we used in the previous section is not sufficient for our trading application, but it illustrated the basics of how to put a GUI together using F#. Next, we'll add the controls needed and prepare it to present the information from the model. The following is a mock representation showing where the controls will be placed and the overall idea about the GUI:

A mock representation of the trading system's GUI

Let's look at the required code. Most of the code is straightforward, following the same rules used in the GUI in the last section. The DataGridView control has some properties set for the width to be adjusted automatically. The same is true for labels, where the property AutoSize is set to true. The final GUI will look like the one in the screenshot displayed after the following code:

/// GUI code according to mock
namespace GUI

open System
open System.Drawing
open System.Windows.Forms
open Agents
open Model

open System.Net
open System.ComponentModel
  // User interface...