Thanks for the reply. Yep I think it would be complicated because there are many variables involved. For example a price jump for one player might not be the same for another player who is higher ranked. I'm not sure I could figure it out but it would most probably involve storing lots of values and doing comparisons. I'm not sure it's worth it as most other events have live score feeds.Dallas wrote: ↑Wed Jan 16, 2019 12:31 amIf you were to do it you would need to know the 'approx' movement which would always be relevant to the current price so would require a lot of rules and conditions to cover everything, it would take so much testing/setting up the tournament would be over before it was ready, even then I'd be surprised if it could be made better than 90% accurate.fuzz28 wrote: ↑Wed Jan 16, 2019 12:14 amAnyone know of a good automation rule which can work out if there's been a break in serve/lost first set that can be used without a live feed of scores. This is because there are no live scores for the Australian Open. I was trying to do a relative odds condition e.g. back odds are lower than 10 minutes ago but I'm not sure if this is effective.
Thanks
Australian Open 2019
- MemphisFlash
- Posts: 2162
- Joined: Fri May 16, 2014 10:12 pm
- Location: Leicester
against the crowd for second game in a row
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- MemphisFlash
- Posts: 2162
- Joined: Fri May 16, 2014 10:12 pm
- Location: Leicester
Great match for Batista Agu