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Stock Tools

A collection of tools for stock analysis. Currently, there are 2 tools:

  1. NewsSentimentAnalysis - Python based script for scanning Twitter for sentiment analysis and keywords
  2. UpcomingEarningsScanner - Python based script for scanning for upcoming earnings reports given a set of criteria

Running Each Tool Operating GitHub

Running Each Tool

Ensure that you have Python3.x installed.

News Sentiment Analysis

Go into the TwitterSentimentAnalysis.py file and edit the code instructions at the bottom, underneath:

if __name__ == "__main__":

Edit the phrase variable to change what phrase you'd like to scan Twitter for. Edit the query variable's filter_in and filter_out inputs for a more detailed search. Comment or uncomment the tw.StartStream line to control whether a live stream of tweets gets scanned.

To run, call:

$python TwitterSentimentAnalysis.py

within this subdirectory or use your favorite Python IDE.

Upcoming Earnings Scanner

Go into the main.py file of the UpcomingEarningsScanner directory. Change the minimum volume, market cap, and last closed values to control the criteria filter.

To run, call:

$python main.py

within this subdirectory or use your favorite Python IDE.

Operating GitHub

Clone Instructions

Open your bash terminal and navigate to the directory where you wish to place your repo. Use the cd command to navigate directories, like the example below.

$ cd C:\Users\$USER\Documents

Clone the repository with the following command:

$ git clone https://github.com/brcolli/StockTools.git

This will create a new directory called StockTools. From this directory, if your git is properly set up, you should be able to push and pull to the repo.

Committing your changes

Before you can push your changes to the server, you must commit your changes. This is how you tell git which changes you want to push. There are two steps: the first is staging the changes so git knows which files should be pushed, and the second is packaging them into a commit with a commit message. Use the following commands to add and commit your changes:

$ git add -A
$ git commit -m "My commit message"

Once you have added and committed your changes, you are ready to push and pull.

Pushing and Pulling

Pushing means to push your local changes (changes you made on your computer to the repo) to the remote repo (the version saved on the server). The format is as follows:

$ git push REMOTE BRANCH

For our purposes, REMOTE will always be origin and BRANCH will always be master. Therefore, the command to push to the server will be:

$ git push origin master

Pulling means to bring in the version that is saved on the server. This will allow you to bring in any changes someone else has made and pushed. Git will attempt to merge any files and changes, such that you don't lose your own local changes. If there are merge conflicts, git will tell you before it overwrites anything. The format is as follows:

$ git pull REMOTE BRANCH

For our purposes, REMOTE will always be origin and BRANCH will always be master. Therefore, the command to pull from the server will be:

$ git pull origin master

A typical workflow would be to start your coding session by pulling in any changes made to the server, then make any changes you wish, then add your changes, commit your changes, and finally push your changes.

$ git pull origin master
.......
DO CODING
.......
$ git add -A
$ git commit -m "I did some coding!"
$ git push origin master

Note: If the repo was changed while you were coding or making changes, you will need to pull those changes in before you push, BUT AFTER you commit. This would look like so:

$ git pull origin master
.......
DO CODING
.......
$ git add -A
$ git commit -m "I did some coding!"
# git pull origin master
$ git push origin master

Do not be afraid to make mistakes! Git has version control history, anything you break can probably be fixed. Happy coding~

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Tools for stock trading and analysis.

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