Zipline is a Pythonic algorithmic trading library. It is an event-driven system for backtesting. Zipline is currently used in production as the backtesting and live-trading engine powering Quantopian -- a free, community-centered, hosted platform for building and executing trading strategies. Quantopian also offers a fully managed service for professionals that includes Zipline, Alphalens, Pyfolio, FactSet data, and more.
- Join our Community!
- Documentation
- Want to Contribute? See our Development Guidelines
- Ease of Use: Zipline tries to get out of your way so that you can focus on algorithm development. See below for a code example.
- "Batteries Included": many common statistics like moving average and linear regression can be readily accessed from within a user-written algorithm.
- PyData Integration: Input of historical data and output of performance statistics are based on Pandas DataFrames to integrate nicely into the existing PyData ecosystem.
- Statistics and Machine Learning Libraries: You can use libraries like matplotlib, scipy, statsmodels, and sklearn to support development, analysis, and visualization of state-of-the-art trading systems.
Assuming you have all required (see note below) non-Python dependencies, you
can install Zipline with pip
via:
$ pip install zipline
Note: Installing Zipline via pip
is slightly more involved than the
average Python package. Simply running pip install zipline
will likely
fail if you've never installed any scientific Python packages before.
There are two reasons for the additional complexity:
- Zipline ships several C extensions that require access to the CPython C API.
In order to build the C extensions,
pip
needs access to the CPython header files for your Python installation. - Zipline depends on numpy, the core library for numerical array computing in Python. Numpy depends on having the LAPACK linear algebra routines available.
Because LAPACK and the CPython headers are binary dependencies, the correct way
to install them varies from platform to platform. On Linux, users generally
acquire these dependencies via a package manager like apt
, yum
, or
pacman
. On OSX, Homebrew is a popular choice
providing similar functionality.
See the full Zipline Install Documentation for more information on acquiring binary dependencies for your specific platform.
Another way to install Zipline is via the conda
package manager, which
comes as part of Anaconda or can be
installed via pip install conda
.
Once set up, you can install Zipline from our Quantopian
channel:
$ conda install -c Quantopian zipline
Currently supported platforms include:
- GNU/Linux 64-bit
- OSX 64-bit
- Windows 64-bit
Note
Windows 32-bit may work; however, it is not currently included in continuous integration tests.
See our getting started tutorial.
The following code implements a simple dual moving average algorithm.
from zipline.api import order_target, record, symbol
def initialize(context):
context.i = 0
context.asset = symbol('AAPL')
def handle_data(context, data):
# Skip first 300 days to get full windows
context.i += 1
if context.i < 300:
return
# Compute averages
# data.history() has to be called with the same params
# from above and returns a pandas dataframe.
short_mavg = data.history(context.asset, 'price', bar_count=100, frequency="1d").mean()
long_mavg = data.history(context.asset, 'price', bar_count=300, frequency="1d").mean()
# Trading logic
if short_mavg > long_mavg:
# order_target orders as many shares as needed to
# achieve the desired number of shares.
order_target(context.asset, 100)
elif short_mavg < long_mavg:
order_target(context.asset, 0)
# Save values for later inspection
record(AAPL=data.current(context.asset, 'price'),
short_mavg=short_mavg,
long_mavg=long_mavg)
You can then run this algorithm using the Zipline CLI; you'll need a Quandl API key to ingest the default data bundle. Once you have your key, run the following from the command line:
$ QUANDL_API_KEY=<yourkey> zipline ingest -b quandl
$ zipline run -f dual_moving_average.py --start 2014-1-1 --end 2018-1-1 -o dma.pickle
This will download asset pricing data data from quandl, and stream it through the algorithm over the specified time range. Then, the resulting performance DataFrame is saved in dma.pickle, which you can load an analyze from within Python.
You can find other examples in the zipline/examples
directory.
If you find a bug, feel free to open an issue and fill out the issue template.
All contributions, bug reports, bug fixes, documentation improvements, enhancements, and ideas are welcome. Details on how to set up a development environment can be found in our development guidelines.
If you are looking to start working with the Zipline codebase, navigate to the GitHub issues tab and start looking through interesting issues. Sometimes there are issues labeled as Beginner Friendly or Help Wanted.
Feel free to ask questions on the mailing list or on Gitter.