#!/usr/bin/perl -w # # Copyright (C) 1998, Dj Padzensky # Copyright (C) 1998, 1999 Linas Vepstas # Copyright (C) 2000, Yannick LE NY # Copyright (C) 2000, Paul Fenwick # Copyright (C) 2000, Brent Neal # # This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify # it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by # the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or # (at your option) any later version. # # This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, # but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of # MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the # GNU General Public License for more details. # # You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License # along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software # Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA # 02111-1307, USA # # # This code derived from Padzensky's work on package Finance::YahooQuote, # but extends its capabilites to encompas a greater number of data sources. # # This code was developed as part of GnuCash package Finance::Quote; require 5.005; use strict; use Exporter (); use Carp; use Finance::Quote::UserAgent; use HTTP::Request::Common; use Encode; use JSON qw( decode_json ); # use Data::Dumper; use vars qw/@ISA @EXPORT @EXPORT_OK @EXPORT_TAGS $TIMEOUT %MODULES %METHODS $AUTOLOAD $ALPHAVANTAGE_CURRENCY_URL $USE_EXPERIMENTAL_UA/; # Call on the Yahoo API: # - "f=l1" should return a single value - the "Last Trade (Price Only)" # - "s=" the value of s should be "=X" # where and are currencies # Excample: http://finance.yahoo.com/d/quotes.csv?f=l1&s=AUDGBP=X # Documentation can be found here: # http://code.google.com/p/yahoo-finance-managed/wiki/csvQuotesDownload $ALPHAVANTAGE_CURRENCY_URL = "https://www.alphavantage.co/query?function=CURRENCY_EXCHANGE_RATE"; @ISA = qw/Exporter/; @EXPORT = (); @EXPORT_OK = qw/fidelity troweprice asx tiaacref currency_lookup/; @EXPORT_TAGS = ( all => [@EXPORT_OK]); # VERSION $USE_EXPERIMENTAL_UA = 0; # Autoload method for obsolete methods. This also allows people to # call methods that objects export without having to go through fetch. sub AUTOLOAD { my $method = $AUTOLOAD; $method =~ s/.*:://; # Force the dummy object (and hence default methods) to be loaded. _dummy(); # If the method we want is in %METHODS, then set up an appropriate # subroutine for it next time. if (exists($METHODS{$method})) { eval qq[sub $method { my \$this; if (ref \$_[0]) { \$this = shift; } \$this ||= _dummy(); \$this->fetch("$method",\@_); }]; carp $@ if $@; no strict 'refs'; # So we can use &$method return &$method(@_); } carp "$AUTOLOAD does not refer to a known method."; } # _load_module (private class method) # _load_module loads a module(s) and registers its various methods for # use. sub _load_modules { my $class = shift; my $baseclass = ref $class || $class; my @modules = @_; # Go to each module and use them. Also record what methods # they support and enter them into the %METHODS hash. foreach my $module (@modules) { my $modpath = "${baseclass}::${module}"; unless (defined($MODULES{$modpath})) { # Have to use an eval here because perl doesn't # like to use strings. eval "use $modpath;"; carp $@ if $@; $MODULES{$modpath} = 1; # Methodhash will continue method-name, function ref # pairs. my %methodhash = $modpath->methods; my %labelhash = $modpath->labels; # Find the labels that we can do currency conversion # on. my $curr_fields_func = $modpath->can("currency_fields") || \&default_currency_fields; my @currency_fields = &$curr_fields_func; # @currency_fields may contain duplicates. # This following chunk of code removes them. my %seen; @currency_fields=grep {!$seen{$_}++} @currency_fields; foreach my $method (keys %methodhash) { push (@{$METHODS{$method}}, { function => $methodhash{$method}, labels => $labelhash{$method}, currency_fields => \@currency_fields}); } } } } # ======================================================================= # new (public class method) # # Returns a new Finance::Quote object. If methods are asked for, then # it will load the relevant modules. With no arguments, this function # loads a default set of methods. sub new { my $self = shift; my $class = ref($self) || $self; my $this = {}; bless $this, $class; my @modules = (); my @reqmodules = (); # Requested modules. # If there's no argument list, but we have the appropriate # environment variable set, we'll use that instead. if ($ENV{FQ_LOAD_QUOTELET} and !@_) { @reqmodules = split(' ',$ENV{FQ_LOAD_QUOTELET}); } else { @reqmodules = @_; } # If we get an empty new(), or one starting with -defaults, # then load up the default methods. if (!@reqmodules or $reqmodules[0] eq "-defaults") { shift(@reqmodules) if (@reqmodules); # Default modules @modules = qw/AEX AIAHK AlphaVantage ASEGR ASX BMONesbittBurns BSERO Bourso Cdnfundlibrary Citywire CSE Currencies Deka DWS FTPortfolios Fidelity FidelityFixed FinanceCanada Fool FTfunds HU GoldMoney HEX IndiaMutual LeRevenu ManInvestments Morningstar MorningstarJP MStaruk NZX Platinum SEB SIXfunds SIXshares StockHouseCanada TSP TSX Tdefunds Tdwaterhouse Tiaacref TNetuk Troweprice Trustnet Union USFedBonds VWD ZA Cominvest Finanzpartner YahooJSON YahooYQL ZA_UnitTrusts/; } $this->_load_modules(@modules,@reqmodules); $this->{TIMEOUT} = $TIMEOUT if defined($TIMEOUT); $this->{FAILOVER} = 1; $this->{REQUIRED} = []; return $this; } # ======================================================================= # _dummy (private function) # # _dummy returns a Finance::Quote object. I'd really rather not have # this, but to maintain backwards compatibility we hold on to it. { my $dummy_obj; sub _dummy { return $dummy_obj ||= Finance::Quote->new; } } # ======================================================================= # sources (public object method) # # sources returns a list of sources which can be passed to fetch to # obtain information. # # Usage: @sources = $quoter->sources(); # $sourceref = $quoter->sources(); sub sources { return(wantarray ? keys %METHODS : [keys %METHODS]); } # ======================================================================= # currency (public object method) # # currency allows the conversion of one currency to another. # # Usage: $quoter->currency("USD","AUD"); # $quoter->currency("15.95 USD","AUD"); # # undef is returned upon error. sub currency { my $this = shift if (ref($_[0])); $this ||= _dummy(); my ($from, $to) = @_; return undef unless ($from and $to); $from =~ s/^\s*(\d*\.?\d*)\s*//; my $amount = $1 || 1; # Don't know if these have to be in upper case, but it's # better to be safe than sorry. $to = uc($to); $from = uc($from); return $amount if ($from eq $to); # Trivial case. my $ua = $this->user_agent; my $ALPHAVANTAGE_API_KEY = $ENV{'ALPHAVANTAGE_API_KEY'}; return undef unless ( defined $ALPHAVANTAGE_API_KEY ); my $try_cnt = 0; my $json_data; do { $try_cnt += 1; my $reply = $ua->request(GET "${ALPHAVANTAGE_CURRENCY_URL}" . "&from_currency=" . ${from} . "&to_currency=" . ${to} . "&apikey=" . ${ALPHAVANTAGE_API_KEY} ); my $code = $reply->code; my $desc = HTTP::Status::status_message($code); return undef unless ($code == 200); my $body = $reply->content; $json_data = JSON::decode_json $body; if ( !$json_data || $json_data->{'Error Message'} ) { return undef; } # print "Failed: " . $json_data->{'Information'} . "\n" if (($try_cnt < 5) && ($json_data->{'Information'})); sleep (40) if (($try_cnt < 5) && ($json_data->{'Information'})); } while (($try_cnt < 5) && ($json_data->{'Information'})); sleep(1); my $exchange_rate = $json_data->{'Realtime Currency Exchange Rate'}->{'5. Exchange Rate'}; { local $^W = 0; # Avoid undef warnings. # We force this to a number to avoid situations where # we may have extra cruft, or no amount. return undef unless ($exchange_rate+0); } if ( $exchange_rate < 0.001 ) { # exchange_rate is too little. we'll get more accuracy by using # the inverse rate and inverse it my $inverse_rate = $this->currency( $to, $from ); { local $^W = 0; return undef unless ( $exchange_rate + 0 ); } $exchange_rate = int( 100000000 / $inverse_rate + .5 ) / 100000000; } return ($exchange_rate * $amount); } # ======================================================================= # currency_lookup (public object method) # # search for available currency codes # # Usage: $quoter->currency_lookup({ name => qr/australia/i }); # $quoter->currency_lookup( code => 'EU' ); # $quoter->currency_lookup( name => 'Euro', code => qr/eu/i ); # $quoter->currency_lookup(); # # If more than one lookup parameter is given all must match for # a currency to match. # # undef is returned upon error. sub currency_lookup { my $this = shift if (ref $_[0]); $this ||= _dummy(); # Validate parameters my %valid_params = map { $_ => 1 } qw( name code ); my %params = @_; my $param_errors = 0; for my $key ( keys %params ) { if ( ! exists $valid_params{$key} ) { warn "Invalid parameter: ${key}"; $param_errors++; } } return undef if $param_errors > 0; # Retrieve known currencies my $known_currencies = Finance::Quote::Currencies::known_currencies(); # Return currencies based on parameters my $returned_currencies = {}; if ( scalar keys %params == 0 ) { $returned_currencies = $known_currencies; } else { for my $code ( keys %{$known_currencies} ) { # Make sure all parameters match my $matched = 0; if ( exists $params{name} && _smart_compare( $known_currencies->{$code}->{name}, $params{name} ) ) { $matched++; } if ( exists $params{code} && _smart_compare( $code, $params{code} ) ) { $matched++; } if ( $matched == scalar keys %params ) { $returned_currencies->{$code} = $known_currencies->{$code} } } } return $returned_currencies; } # _smart_compare (private method function) # # This function compares values where the method depends on the # type of the second parameter. # regex : compare as regex # scalar : test for substring match sub _smart_compare { my ($val1, $val2) = @_; if ( ref $val2 eq 'Regexp' ) { return $val1 =~ $val2; } else { return index($val1, $val2) > -1 } } # ======================================================================= # set_currency (public object method) # # set_currency allows information to be requested in the specified # currency. If called with no arguments then information is returned # in the default currency. # # Requesting stocks in a particular currency increases the time taken, # and the likelyhood of failure, as additional operations are required # to fetch the currency conversion information. # # This method should only be called from the quote object unless you # know what you are doing. sub set_currency { my $this = shift if (ref $_[0]); $this ||= _dummy(); unless (defined($_[0])) { delete $this->{"currency"}; } else { $this->{"currency"} = $_[0]; } } # default_currency_fields (public method) # # This is a list of fields that will be automatically converted during # currency conversion. If a module provides a currency_fields() # function then that list will be used instead. sub default_currency_fields { return qw/last high low net bid ask close open day_range year_range eps div cap nav price/; } # _convert (private object method) # # This function converts between one currency and another. It expects # to receive a hashref to the information, a reference to a list # of the stocks to be converted, and a reference to a list of fields # that conversion should apply to. { my %conversion; # Conversion lookup table. sub _convert { my $this = shift; my $info = shift; my $stocks = shift; my $convert_fields = shift; my $new_currency = $this->{"currency"}; # Skip all this unless they actually want conversion. return unless $new_currency; foreach my $stock (@$stocks) { my $currency; # Skip stocks that don't have a currency. next unless ($currency = $info->{$stock,"currency"}); # Skip if it's already in the same currency. next if ($currency eq $new_currency); # Lookup the currency conversion if we haven't # already. unless (exists $conversion{$currency,$new_currency}) { $conversion{$currency,$new_currency} = $this->currency($currency,$new_currency); } # Make sure we have a reasonable currency conversion. # If we don't, mark the stock as bad. unless ($conversion{$currency,$new_currency}) { $info->{$stock,"success"} = 0; $info->{$stock,"errormsg"} = "Currency conversion failed."; next; } # Okay, we have clean data. Convert it. Ideally # we'd like to just *= entire fields, but # unfortunately some things (like ranges, # capitalisation, etc) don't take well to that. # Hence we pull out any numbers we see, convert # them, and stick them back in. That's pretty # yucky, but it works. foreach my $field (@$convert_fields) { next unless (defined $info->{$stock,$field}); $info->{$stock,$field} = $this->scale_field($info->{$stock,$field},$conversion{$currency,$new_currency}); } # Set the new currency. $info->{$stock,"currency"} = $new_currency; } } } # ======================================================================= # Helper function that can scale a field. This is useful because it # handles things like ranges "105.4 - 108.3", and not just straight fields. # # The function takes a string or number to scale, and the factor to scale # it by. For example, scale_field("1023","0.01") would return "10.23". sub scale_field { shift if ref $_[0]; # Shift off the object, if there is one. my ($field, $scale) = @_; my @chunks = split(/([^0-9.])/,$field); for (my $i=0; $i < @chunks; $i++) { next unless $chunks[$i] =~ /\d/; $chunks[$i] *= $scale; } return join("",@chunks); } # ======================================================================= # Timeout code. If called on a particular object, then it sets # the timout for that object only. If called as a class method # (or as Finance::Quote::timeout) then it sets the default timeout # for all new objects that will be created. sub timeout { if (@_ == 1 or !ref($_[0])) { # Direct or class call. return $TIMEOUT = $_[0]; } # Otherwise we were called through an object. Yay. # Set the timeout in this object only. my $this = shift; return $this->{TIMEOUT} = shift; } # ======================================================================= # failover (public object method) # # This sets/gets whether or not it's acceptable to use failover techniques. sub failover { my $this = shift; my $value = shift; return $this->{FAILOVER} = $value if (defined($value)); return $this->{FAILOVER}; } # ======================================================================= # require_labels (public object method) # # Require_labels indicates which labels are required for lookups. Only methods # that have registered all the labels specified in the list passed to # require_labels() will be called. # # require_labels takes a list of required labels. When called with no # arguments, the require list is cleared. # # This method always succeeds. sub require_labels { my $this = shift; my @labels = @_; $this->{REQUIRED} = \@labels; return; } # _require_test (private object method) # # This function takes an array. It returns true if all required # labels appear in the arrayref. It returns false otherwise. # # This function could probably be made more efficient. sub _require_test { my $this = shift; my %available; @available{@_} = (); # Ooooh, hash-slice. :) my @required = @{$this->{REQUIRED}}; return 1 unless @required; for (my $i = 0; $i < @required; $i++) { return 0 unless exists $available{$required[$i]}; } return 1; } # ======================================================================= # fetch (public object method) # # Fetch is a wonderful generic fetcher. It takes a method and stuff to # fetch. It's a nicer interface for when you have a list of stocks with # different sources which you wish to deal with. sub fetch { my $this = shift if ref ($_[0]); $this ||= _dummy(); my $method = lc(shift); my @stocks = @_; unless (exists $METHODS{$method}) { carp "Undefined fetch-method $method passed to ". "Finance::Quote::fetch"; return; } # Failover code. This steps through all availabe methods while # we still have failed stocks to look-up. This loop only # runs a single time unless FAILOVER is defined. my %returnhash = (); foreach my $methodinfo (@{$METHODS{$method}}) { my $funcref = $methodinfo->{"function"}; next unless $this->_require_test(@{$methodinfo->{"labels"}}); my @failed_stocks = (); %returnhash = (%returnhash,&$funcref($this,@stocks)); foreach my $stock (@stocks) { push(@failed_stocks,$stock) unless ($returnhash{$stock,"success"}); } $this->_convert(\%returnhash,\@stocks, $methodinfo->{"currency_fields"}); last unless $this->{FAILOVER}; last unless @failed_stocks; @stocks = @failed_stocks; } return wantarray() ? %returnhash : \%returnhash; } # ======================================================================= # user_agent (public object method) # # Returns a LWP::UserAgent which conforms to the relevant timeouts, # proxies, and other settings on the particular Finance::Quote object. # # This function is mainly intended to be used by the modules that we load, # but it can be used by the application to directly play with the # user-agent settings. sub user_agent { my $this = shift; return $this->{UserAgent} if $this->{UserAgent}; my $ua; if ($USE_EXPERIMENTAL_UA) { $ua = Finance::Quote::UserAgent->new; } else { $ua = LWP::UserAgent->new; } $ua->timeout($this->{TIMEOUT}) if defined($this->{TIMEOUT}); $ua->env_proxy; $this->{UserAgent} = $ua; return $ua; } # ======================================================================= # parse_csv (public object method) # # Grabbed from the Perl Cookbook. Parsing csv isn't as simple as you thought! # sub parse_csv { shift if (ref $_[0]); # Shift off the object if we have one. my $text = shift; # record containing comma-separated values my @new = (); push(@new, $+) while $text =~ m{ # the first part groups the phrase inside the quotes. # see explanation of this pattern in MRE "([^\"\\]*(?:\\.[^\"\\]*)*)",? | ([^,]+),? | , }gx; push(@new, undef) if substr($text, -1,1) eq ','; return @new; # list of values that were comma-separated } # ======================================================================= # parse_csv_semicolon (public object method) # # Grabbed from the Perl Cookbook. Parsing csv isn't as simple as you thought! # sub parse_csv_semicolon { shift if (ref $_[0]); # Shift off the object if we have one. my $text = shift; # record containing comma-separated values my @new = (); push(@new, $+) while $text =~ m{ # the first part groups the phrase inside the quotes. # see explanation of this pattern in MRE "([^\"\\]*(?:\\.[^\"\\]*)*)";? | ([^;]+);? | ; }gx; push(@new, undef) if substr($text, -1,1) eq ';'; return @new; # list of values that were comma-separated } # ======================================================================= # store_date (public object method) # # Given the various pieces of a date, this functions figure out how to # store them in both the pre-existing US date format (mm/dd/yyyy), and # also in the ISO date format (yyyy-mm-dd). This function expects to # be called with the arguments: # # (inforef, symbol_name, data_hash) # # The components of date hash can be any of: # # usdate - A date in mm/dd/yy or mm/dd/yyyy # eurodate - A date in dd/mm/yy or dd/mm/yyyy # isodate - A date in yy-mm-dd or yyyy-mm-dd # year - The year in yyyy # month - The month in mm or mmm format (i.e. 07 or Jul) # day - The day # today - A flag to indicate todays date should be used. # # The separator for the *date forms is ignored. It can be any # non-alphanumeric character. Any combination of year, month, and day # values can be provided. Missing fields are filled in based upon # today's date. # sub store_date { my $this = shift; my $inforef = shift; my $symbol = shift; my $piecesref = shift; my ($year, $month, $day, $this_month, $year_specified); my %mnames = (jan => 1, feb => 2, mar => 3, apr => 4, may => 5, jun => 6, jul => 7, aug => 8, sep => 9, oct =>10, nov =>11, dec =>12); # printf "In store_date\n"; # print "inforef $inforef\n"; # print "piecesref $piecesref\n"; # foreach my $key (keys %$piecesref) { # printf (" %s: %s\n", $key, $piecesref->{$key}); # } # Default to today's date. ($month, $day, $year) = (localtime())[4,3,5]; $month++; $year += 1900; $this_month = $month; $year_specified = 0; # Proces the inputs if (defined $piecesref->{isodate}) { ($year, $month, $day) = ($piecesref->{isodate} =~ m/(\d+)\W+(\w+)\W+(\d+)/); $year += 2000 if $year < 100; $year_specified = 1; # printf ("ISO Date %s: Year %d, Month %s, Day %d\n", $piecesref->{isodate}, $year, $month, $day); } if (defined $piecesref->{usdate}) { ($month, $day, $year) = ($piecesref->{usdate} =~ /(\w+)\W+(\d+)\W+(\d+)/); $year += 2000 if $year < 100; $year_specified = 1; # printf ("US Date %s: Month %s, Day %d, Year %d\n", $piecesref->{usdate}, $month, $day, $year); } if (defined $piecesref->{eurodate}) { ($day, $month, $year) = ($piecesref->{eurodate} =~ /(\d+)\W+(\w+)\W+(\d+)/); $year += 2000 if $year < 100; $year_specified = 1; # printf ("Euro Date %s: Day %d, Month %s, Year %d\n", $piecesref->{eurodate}, $day, $month, $year); } if (defined ($piecesref->{year})) { $year = $piecesref->{year}; $year += 2000 if $year < 100; $year_specified = 1; } $month = $piecesref->{month} if defined ($piecesref->{month}); $month = $mnames{lc(substr($month,0,3))} if ($month =~ /\D/); $day = $piecesref->{day} if defined ($piecesref->{day}); $year-- if (($year_specified == 0) && ($this_month < $month)); $inforef->{$symbol, "date"} = sprintf "%02d/%02d/%04d", $month, $day, $year; $inforef->{$symbol, "isodate"} = sprintf "%04d-%02d-%02d", $year, $month, $day; } sub isoTime { my ($self,$timeString) = @_ ; $timeString =~ tr/ //d ; $timeString = uc $timeString ; my $retTime = "00:00"; # return zero time if unparsable input if ($timeString=~m/^(\d+)[\.:UH](\d+)(AM|PM)?/) { my ($hours,$mins)= ($1-0,$2-0) ; $hours-=12 if ($hours==12); $hours+=12 if ($3 && ($3 eq "PM")) ; if ($hours>=0 && $hours<=23 && $mins>=0 && $mins<=59 ) { $retTime = sprintf ("%02d:%02d", $hours, $mins) ; } } return $retTime; } # If $str ends with a B like "20B" or "1.6B" then expand it as billions like # "20000000000" or "1600000000". # # This is done with string manipulations so floating-point rounding doesn't # produce spurious digits for values like "1.6" which aren't exactly # representable in binary. # # Is "B" for billions the only abbreviation from Yahoo? # Could extend and rename this if there's also millions or thousands. # # For reference, if the value was just for use within perl then simply # substituting to exponential "1.5e9" might work. But expanding to full # digits seems a better idea as the value is likely to be printed directly # as a string. sub B_to_billions { my ($self,$str) = @_; ### B_to_billions(): $str if ($str =~ s/B$//i) { $str = $self->decimal_shiftup ($str, 9); } return $str; } # $str is a number like "123" or "123.45" # return it with the decimal point moved $shift places to the right # must have $shift>=1 # eg. decimal_shiftup("123",3) -> "123000" # decimal_shiftup("123.45",1) -> "1234.5" # decimal_shiftup("0.25",1) -> "2.5" # sub decimal_shiftup { my ($self, $str, $shift) = @_; # delete decimal point and set $after to count of chars after decimal. # Leading "0" as in "0.25" is deleted too giving "25" so as not to end up # with something that might look like leading 0 for octal. my $after = ($str =~ s/(?:^0)?\.(.*)/$1/ ? length($1) : 0); $shift -= $after; # now $str is an integer and $shift is relative to the end of $str if ($shift >= 0) { # moving right, eg. "1234" becomes "12334000" return $str . ('0' x $shift); # extra zeros appended } else { # negative means left, eg. "12345" becomes "12.345" # no need to prepend zeros since demanding initial $shift>=1 substr ($str, $shift,0, '.'); # new '.' at shifted spot from end return $str; } } # Dummy destroy function to avoid AUTOLOAD catching it. sub DESTROY { return; } 1; __END__ =head1 NAME Finance::Quote - Get stock and mutual fund quotes from various exchanges =head1 SYNOPSIS use Finance::Quote; $q = Finance::Quote->new; $q->timeout(60); $conversion_rate = $q->currency("AUD","USD"); $q->set_currency("EUR"); # Return all info in Euros. $q->require_labels(qw/price date high low volume/); $q->failover(1); # Set failover support (on by default). %quotes = $q->fetch("nasdaq",@stocks); $hashref = $q->fetch("nyse",@stocks); =head1 DESCRIPTION This module gets stock quotes from various internet sources, including Yahoo! Finance, Fidelity Investments, and the Australian Stock Exchange. There are two methods of using this module -- a functional interface that is deprecated, and an object-orientated method that provides greater flexibility and stability. With the exception of straight currency exchange rates, all information is returned as a two-dimensional hash (or a reference to such a hash, if called in a scalar context). For example: %info = $q->fetch("australia","CML"); print "The price of CML is ".$info{"CML","price"}; The first part of the hash (eg, "CML") is referred to as the stock. The second part (in this case, "price") is referred to as the label. =head2 LABELS When information about a stock is returned, the following standard labels may be used. Some custom-written modules may use labels not mentioned here. If you wish to be certain that you obtain a certain set of labels for a given stock, you can specify that using require_labels(). name Company or Mutual Fund Name last Last Price high Highest trade today low Lowest trade today date Last Trade Date (MM/DD/YY format) time Last Trade Time net Net Change p_change Percent Change from previous day's close volume Volume avg_vol Average Daily Vol bid Bid ask Ask close Previous Close open Today's Open day_range Day's Range year_range 52-Week Range eps Earnings per Share pe P/E Ratio div_date Dividend Pay Date div Dividend per Share div_yield Dividend Yield cap Market Capitalization ex_div Ex-Dividend Date. nav Net Asset Value yield Yield (usually 30 day avg) exchange The exchange the information was obtained from. success Did the stock successfully return information? (true/false) errormsg If success is false, this field may contain the reason why. method The module (as could be passed to fetch) which found this information. type The type of equity returned If all stock lookups fail (possibly because of a failed connection) then the empty list may be returned, or undef in a scalar context. =head1 INSTALLATION To install this module, run the following commands: perl Makefile.PL make make test make install For more detailed instructions, please see the INSTALL file. =head1 SUPPORT AND DOCUMENTATION After installing, you can find documentation for this module with the perldoc command. perldoc Finance::Quote You can also look for information at: =over =item RT, CPAN's request tracker http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/Bugs.html?Dist=Finance-Quote =item AnnoCPAN, Annotated CPAN documentation http://annocpan.org/dist/Finance-Quote =item CPAN Ratings http://cpanratings.perl.org/d/Finance-Quote =item Search CPAN http://search.cpan.org/dist/Finance-Quote =item The Finance::Quote home page http://finance-quote.sourceforge.net/ =item The Finance::YahooQuote home page http://www.padz.net/~djpadz/YahooQuote/ =item The GnuCash home page http://www.gnucash.org/ =back =head1 AVAILABLE METHODS =head2 NEW my $q = Finance::Quote->new; my $q = Finance::Quote->new("ASX"); my $q = Finance::Quote->new("-defaults", "CustomModule"); With no arguents, this creates a new Finance::Quote object with the default methods. If the environment variable FQ_LOAD_QUOTELET is set, then the contents of FQ_LOAD_QUOTELET (split on whitespace) will be used as the argument list. This allows users to load their own custom modules without having to change existing code. If you do not want users to be able to load their own modules at run-time, pass an explicit argumetn to ->new() (usually "-defaults"). When new() is passed one or more arguments, an object is created with only the specified modules loaded. If the first argument is "-defaults", then the default modules will be loaded first, followed by any other specified modules. Note that the FQ_LOAD_QUOTELET environment variable must begin with "-defaults" if you wish the default modules to be loaded. Any modules specified will automatically be looked for in the Finance::Quote:: module-space. Hence, Finance::Quote->new("ASX") will load the module Finance::Quote::ASX. Please read the Finance::Quote hacker's guide for information on how to create new modules for Finance::Quote. =head2 FETCH my %stocks = $q->fetch("usa","IBM","MSFT","LNUX"); my $hashref = $q->fetch("usa","IBM","MSFT","LNUX"); Fetch takes an exchange as its first argument. The second and remaining arguments are treated as stock-names. In the standard Finance::Quote distribution, the following exchanges are recognised: australia Australan Stock Exchange dwsfunds Deutsche Bank Gruppe funds fidelity Fidelity Investments tiaacref TIAA-CREF troweprice T. Rowe Price europe European Markets canada Canadian Markets usa USA Markets nyse New York Stock Exchange nasdaq NASDAQ uk_unit_trusts UK Unit Trusts vanguard Vanguard Investments vwd Vereinigte Wirtschaftsdienste GmbH When called in an array context, a hash is returned. In a scalar context, a reference to a hash will be returned. The structure of this hash is described earlier in this document. The fetch method automatically arranges for failover support and currency conversion if requested. If you wish to fetch information from only one particular source, then consult the documentation of that sub-module for further information. =head2 SOURCES my @sources = $q->sources; my $listref = $q->sources; The sources method returns a list of sources that have currently been loaded and can be passed to the fetch method. If you're providing a user with a list of sources to choose from, then it is recommended that you use this method. =head2 CURRENCY_LOOKUP $currencies_by_name = $q->currency_lookup( name => 'Australian' ); $currencies_by_code = $q->currency_lookup( code => qr/^b/i ); $currencies_by_both = $q->currency_lookup( name => qr/pound/i , code => 'GB' ); The currency_lookup method provides a search against the known currencies. The list of currencies is based on the available currencies in the Yahoo Currency Converter (the list is stored within the module as the list should be fairly static). The lookup can be done by currency name (ie "Australian Dollar"), by code (ie "AUD") or both. You can pass either a scalar or regular expression as a search value - scalar values are matched by substring while regular expressions are matched as-is (no changes are made to the expression). See L (and the C test file) for a way to make sure that the stored currency list is up to date. =head2 CURRENCY $conversion_rate = $q->currency("USD","AUD"); The currency method takes two arguments, and returns a conversion rate that can be used to convert from the first currency into the second. In the example above, we've requested the factor that would convert US dollars into Australian dollars. The currency method will return a false value if a given currency conversion cannot be fetched. At the moment, currency rates are fetched from Yahoo!, and the information returned is governed by Yahoo!'s terms and conditions. See Finance::Quote::Yahoo for more information. =head2 SET_CURRENCY $q->set_currency("FRF"); # Get results in French Francs. The set_currency method can be used to request that all information be returned in the specified currency. Note that this increases the chance stock-lookup failure, as remote requests must be made to fetch both the stock information and the currency rates. In order to improve reliability and speed performance, currency conversion rates are cached and are assumed not to change for the duration of the Finance::Quote object. At this time, currency conversions are only looked up using Yahoo!'s services, and hence information obtained with automatic currency conversion is bound by Yahoo!'s terms and conditions. =head2 FAILOVER $q->failover(1); # Set automatic failover support. $q->failover(0); # Disable failover support. The failover method takes a single argument which either sets (if true) or unsets (if false) automatic failover support. If automatic failover support is enabled (default) then multiple information sources will be tried if one or more sources fail to return the requested information. Failover support will significantly increase the time spent looking for a non-existant stock. If the failover method is called with no arguments, or with an undefined argument, it will return the current failover state (true/false). =head2 USER_AGENT my $ua = $q->user_agent; The user_agent method returns the LWP::UserAgent object that Finance::Quote and its helpers use. Normally this would not be useful to an application, however it is possible to modify the user-agent directly using this method: $q->user_agent->timeout(10); # Set the timeout directly. =head2 SCALE_FIELD my $pounds = $q->scale_field($item_in_pence,0.01); The scale_field() function is a helper that can scale complex fields such as ranges (eg, "102.5 - 103.8") and other fields where the numbers should be scaled but any surrounding text preserved. It's most useful in writing new Finance::Quote modules where you may retrieve information in a non-ISO4217 unit (such as cents) and would like to scale it to a more useful unit (like dollars). =head2 ISOTIME $q->isoTime("11:39PM"); # returns "23:39" $q->isoTime("9:10 AM"); # returns "09:10" This function will return a isoformatted time =head1 ENVIRONMENT Finance::Quote respects all environment that your installed version of LWP::UserAgent respects. Most importantly, it respects the http_proxy environment variable. =head1 BUGS There are no ways for a user to define a failover list. The two-dimensional hash is a somewhat unwieldly method of passing around information when compared to references. A future release is planned that will allow for information to be returned in a more flexible $hash{$stock}{$label} style format. There is no way to override the default behaviour to cache currency conversion rates. =head1 COPYRIGHT & LICENSE Copyright 1998, Dj Padzensky Copyright 1998, 1999 Linas Vepstas Copyright 2000, Yannick LE NY (update for Yahoo Europe and YahooQuote) Copyright 2000-2001, Paul Fenwick (updates for ASX, maintainence and release) Copyright 2000-2001, Brent Neal (update for TIAA-CREF) Copyright 2000 Volker Stuerzl (DWS and VWD support) Copyright 2000 Keith Refson (Trustnet support) Copyright 2001 Rob Sessink (AEX support) Copyright 2001 Leigh Wedding (ASX updates) Copyright 2001 Tobias Vancura (Fool support) Copyright 2001 James Treacy (TD Waterhouse support) Copyright 2008 Erik Colson (isoTime) This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. Currency information fetched through this module is bound by Yahoo!'s terms and conditons. Other copyrights and conditions may apply to data fetched through this module. Please refer to the sub-modules for further information. =head1 AUTHORS Dj Padzensky , PadzNet, Inc. Linas Vepstas Yannick LE NY Paul Fenwick Brent Neal Volker Stuerzl Keith Refson Rob Sessink Leigh Wedding Tobias Vancura James Treacy Bradley Dean Erik Colson The Finance::Quote home page can be found at http://finance-quote.sourceforge.net/ The Finance::YahooQuote home page can be found at http://www.padz.net/~djpadz/YahooQuote/ The GnuCash home page can be found at http://www.gnucash.org/ =head1 SEE ALSO Finance::Quote::AEX, Finance::Quote::ASX, Finance::Quote::Cdnfundlibrary, Finance::Quote::DWS, Finance::Quote::Fidelity, Finance::Quote::FinanceCanada, Finance::Quote::Fool, Finance::Quote::FTPortfolios, Finance::Quote::Tdefunds, Finance::Quote::Tdwaterhouse, Finance::Quote::Tiaacref, Finance::Quote::Troweprice, Finance::Quote::Trustnet, Finance::Quote::VWD, Finance::Quote::Yahoo::Australia, Finance::Quote::Yahoo::Europe, Finance::Quote::Yahoo::USA, LWP::UserAgent You should have also received the Finance::Quote hacker's guide with this package. Please read it if you are interested in adding extra methods to this package. The hacker's guide can also be found on the Finance::Quote website, http://finance-quote.sourceforge.net/ =cut