alpaca-trade-api-go
is a Go library for the Alpaca trade and marketdata API. It allows rapid
trading algo development easily, with support for the both REST and streaming interfaces.
For details of each API behavior, please see the online API document.
go get -u github.com/alpacahq/alpaca-trade-api-go/v2/alpaca
In order to call Alpaca's trade API, you need to obtain an API key pair from the web console.
package main
import (
"fmt"
"github.com/alpacahq/alpaca-trade-api-go/v2/alpaca"
)
func main() {
client := alpaca.NewClient(alpaca.ClientOpts{
// Alternatively you can set your key and secret using the
// APCA_API_KEY_ID and APCA_API_SECRET_KEY environment variables
ApiKey: "YOUR_API_KEY",
ApiSecret: "YOUR_API_SECRET",
BaseURL: "https://paper-api.alpaca.markets",
})
acct, err := client.GetAccount()
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
fmt.Printf("%+v\n", *acct)
}
The following example shows how you can stream your own trade updates. First we register a handler function that simply prints the received trade updates, then we submit a single AAPL buy order. You should see two updates, a "new" event as soon as you submit the order, and a "fill" event soon after that, provided that the market is open.
// Listen to trade updates in the background (with unlimited reconnect)
alpaca.StreamTradeUpdatesInBackground(context.TODO(), func(tu alpaca.TradeUpdate) {
log.Printf("TRADE UPDATE: %+v\n", tu)
})
// Send a single AAPL order
symbol := "AAPL"
qty := decimal.NewFromInt(1)
if _, err := alpaca.PlaceOrder(alpaca.PlaceOrderRequest{
AssetKey: &symbol,
Qty: &qty,
Side: "buy",
Type: "market",
TimeInForce: "day",
}); err != nil {
log.Fatalf("failed place order: %v", err)
}
log.Println("order sent")
select {}
See the examples directory for further examples:
- algo-trading examples
- long-short
- martingale
- mean-reversion
- marketdata examples
- crypto-stream
- data-stream
- marketdata
The HTTP API document is located here.
The Alpaca API requires API key ID and secret key, which you can obtain from
the web console after you sign in. This key pair can then be applied to the SDK
either by setting environment variables (APCA_API_KEY_ID=<key_id>
and APCA_API_SECRET_KEY=<secret_key>
),
or hardcoding them into the Go code directly as shown in the examples above.
export APCA_API_KEY_ID=xxxxx
export APCA_API_SECRET_KEY=yyyyy
For paper trading, set the environment variable APCA_API_BASE_URL
or set the
BaseURL
option when constructing the client.
export APCA_API_BASE_URL=https://paper-api.alpaca.markets
For a more in-depth look at the SDK, see the package documentation.