# Reverse to MetaStock order (newest first) data.reverse()
# Write to MetaStock .DAT file dat_path = os.path.join(output_folder, 'F00001.DAT') with open(dat_path, 'wb') as f: for record in data: # Pack: date (long), open (float), high (float), low (float), # close (float), volume (long), open interest (float) packed = struct.pack( '<lffffl f', # < = little-endian, l = long, f = float record['date'], record['open'], record['high'], record['low'], record['close'], record['volume'], record['open_interest'] ) f.write(packed) convert csv to metastock format
| File | Description | |-------|-------------| | MASTER | An index file containing all security names and their properties. | | EMASTER | Extended master file for additional fields (optional). | | F<nnnn>.DAT | The actual price data file (e.g., F00001.DAT ). | # Reverse to MetaStock order (newest first) data
import struct import os import csv from datetime import datetime def csv_to_metastock(csv_path, output_folder, security_name): """ Convert CSV file to MetaStock format. CSV must have columns: Date, Open, High, Low, Close, Volume Date format in CSV: YYYY-MM-DD """ | import struct import os import csv from
import glob csv_files = glob.glob('C:/CSVs/*.csv') for i, csv_file in enumerate(csv_files): security_name = os.path.basename(csv_file).replace('.csv', '') dat_filename = f'Fi+1:05d.DAT' # F00001.DAT, F00002.DAT, etc. csv_to_metastock(csv_file, 'C:/MetaStock/BatchData', security_name)
File size in bytes Г· 28 = Number of records Example: 2800 bytes Г· 28 = 100 days of data. Using Python, loop through a folder: