Ok, so maybe I'm just tired or something but I can't seem to figure out why this keeps happening.
The code below is called every day for a data point in a database I have.
When I print to the console for debugging, it simply prints out as:
NamespaceName.SharePrices
Not sure what is going on.
public void OnData(TradeBars data)
{
decimal price = data["IBM"].Price;
DateTime today = data["IBM"].Time;
//--------------Below works fine.
if (today.Date >= nextTradeDate.Date)
{
MarketOnOpenOrder("IBM", 50);
Debug("Purchased Stock");
nextTradeDate = today.AddDays(1);
MarketOnOpenOrder("IBM", -25);
}
var derpList = new SharePrices { theDate = today, sharePrice = price };
List<SharePrices> newList = new List<SharePrices>();
newList.Add(derpList);
newList.ForEach(Console.WriteLine);
}
}
public class SharePrices
{
public DateTime theDate { get; set; }
public decimal sharePrice { get; set; }
}
Please excuse my naming conventions. This is just a wireframe for a personal project.
//----------Edit
Thanks for the help guys. I guess what I wasn't understanding is why it was working in my TestClass I wrote just playing with fake data, and when the real implementation came it didn't work:
public static void FindWindowDays()
{
DateTime currentDate = DateTime.Now;
var dates = new List<DateTime>();
for (var dt = currentDate.AddDays(-windowDays); dt <= currentDate; dt = dt.AddDays(1))
{
dates.Add(dt);
}
var ascending = dates.OrderByDescending(i => i);
foreach (var datesyo in ascending)
{
Console.WriteLine(datesyo);
}
}
This seemed to work fine printing the DateTime to console without converting to string. But when I added the second element, it stopped working. That's where I got confuddled.
ToString()
.Object.ToString
method return the fully qualified name of the object's type"... Or maybe WriteLine does not mention "the ToString method of value is called to produce its string representation"?DateTime
class has its ownToString()
method. Your custom class does not, so C# defaults to theNamespaceName.ClassName
if nothing is specified.