A vast compendium of methods to trade stocks and futures, but one that tends to buckle under its own weight. Much statistical introduction, with again the near-obligatory assumption that price returns on stocks are normally distributed (they are not), and then continuing with trading systems of which the majority outdated, such as breakout strategies. More concerning are the sections on spectral analysis, seasonal patterns and behavioural patterns, as these have been debunked countless times. Many pages are stuffed with tables with prices, and the programming language of choice is Tradestation, which is proprietary. The appendix contains Fortran code, which not every aspiring trader will have installed or is prepared to use. The sections on the practicalities of trading systems are perhaps the most useful, or at least align with the title of the book the best, and combine many of the strands from the preceding chapters.