An API, written in Python, for Investopedia's paper trading stock simulator. Pull requests welcome.
This library is now Python 3 compatible!
For this API to be useful you need an Investopedia trading account, which you can make here.
You can install the library with pip:
pip install InvestopediaApi
Importing everything:
from InvestopediaApi import ita
ita
is the name of the file that contains everything of relevance for interacting with Investopedia.
The main class is Account
, which logs you into the simulator upon instantiation.
Log into the simulator:
from InvestopediaApi import ita
client = ita.Account("emailaddress", "password")
Currently, Investopedia Api has 4 "meta" functions:
ita.Account.get_portfolio_status
ita.Account.get_current_securities
ita.Account.get_open_trades
ita.get_quote
get_portfolio_status
returns a named tuple with 4 elements: account_val, buying_power, cash, and annual_return.
from InvestopediaApi import ita
client = ita.Account("email", "password")
status = client.get_portfolio_status()
print(status.account_val)
print(status.buying_power)
print(status.cash)
print(status.annual_return)
get_current_securities
returns a Portfolio object with 3 attributes:
bought, shorted, and options. Each of those is a list of Security objects
with the following attributes:
symbol, description, quantity, purchase_price, current_price, current_value, and gain_loss
from Investopedia import ita
client = ita.Account("email", "password")
portfolio = client.get_current_securities()
# Portfolio is not a list, it is a namedtuple object with 3 attributes: bought, shorted, options.
# Each of bought, shorted, and options is a list of Security objects, which have attributes
# symbol, description, quantity, purchase_price, current_price, current_value, and gain_loss
bought_securities = portfolio.bought
shorted_securities = portfolio.shorted
options = portfolio.options
for bought in bought_securities:
print(bought.symbol)
print(bought.description)
print(bought.purchase_price)
# etc.
# Repeat above loop for shorted securities and options
get_open_trades
returns a list of "open" trades - that is, trades that have been made but not yet executed by the Investopedia platform. It returns a list of Trade namedtuple objects which have the following elements: date_time, description, symbol, and quantity.
from InvestopediaApi import ita
client = ita.Account("email", "password")
open_trades = client.get_open_trades()
for open_trade in open_trades:
print(open_trade.date_time)
print(open_trade.description)
print(open_trade.symbol)
print(open_trade.quantity)
get_quote
returns the price of a security given its symbol. Unlike the other 3 meta functions, this is not part of the Account class. Returns false if the security is not found or another error occurs.
from InvestopediaApi import ita
client = ita.Account("email", "password")
print(ita.get_quote("GOOG"))
Of course, the most important function in this API is the trade
function. This takes, at minimum, a security symbol (string), an orderType (Action class), and a quantity (integer).
The trade
function is best illustrated with examples:
Buying 10 shares of Google (GOOG) at market price:
client.trade("GOOG", ita.Action.buy, 10)
Selling 10 shares of Google at market price:
client.trade("GOOG", ita.Action.sell, 10)
Shorting 10 shares of Google:
client.trade("GOOG", ita.Action.short, 10)
Buying 10 shares of Google with a limit order at $500
client.trade("GOOG", ita.Action.buy, 10, "Limit", 500)
You can browse through the code (it's only in one file) to get a more thorough understanding of the possibilities.