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Building Low Latency Applications with C++

You're reading from   Building Low Latency Applications with C++ Develop a complete low latency trading ecosystem from scratch using modern C++

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781837639359
Length 506 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Sourav Ghosh Sourav Ghosh
Author Profile Icon Sourav Ghosh
Sourav Ghosh
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Toc

Table of Contents (19) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1:Introducing C++ Concepts and Exploring Important Low-Latency Applications
2. Chapter 1: Introducing Low Latency Application Development in C++ FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Designing Some Common Low Latency Applications in C++ 4. Chapter 3: Exploring C++ Concepts from A Low-Latency Application’s Perspective 5. Chapter 4: Building the C++ Building Blocks for Low Latency Applications 6. Part 2:Building a Live Trading Exchange in C++
7. Chapter 5: Designing Our Trading Ecosystem 8. Chapter 6: Building the C++ Matching Engine 9. Chapter 7: Communicating with Market Participants 10. Part 3:Building Real-Time C++ Algorithmic Trading Systems
11. Chapter 8: Processing Market Data and Sending Orders to the Exchange in C++ 12. Chapter 9: Building the C++ Trading Algorithm’s Building Blocks 13. Chapter 10: Building the C++ Market Making and Liquidity Taking Algorithms 14. Part 4:Analyzing and Improving Performance
15. Chapter 11: Adding Instrumentation and Measuring Performance 16. Chapter 12: Analyzing and Optimizing the Performance of Our C++ System 17. Index 18. Other Books You May Enjoy

Defining the operations and interactions in our matching engine

Here, we will declare and define the types, constants, and structures we will need as we build the matching engine in this chapter.

Defining some types and constants

Let us define a few common typedefs to document the types we will use in the rest of this book. We will also define some constants to represent some assumptions that exist, purely for the purpose of simplifying the design of our matching engine. Note that you don’t need these limits/constants, and we leave this enhancement up to the interested among you. All the code for this subsection can be found in the Chapter6/common/types.h file in the GitHub repository for this book.

Defining a few basic types

We will define some types to hold different attributes in our electronic trading system, such as the following:

  • OrderId to identify orders
  • TickerId to identify trading instruments
  • ClientId for the exchange to identify different...
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