HKUDS/Vibe-Trading

Vibe-Trading

"Vibe-Trading: Your Personal Trading Agent"

35/100Agents
Stars3
Forks0
LanguagePython
LicenseMIT

Usage guide

Vibe-Trading is an open-source project around ai-agents with 3 GitHub stars. This guide focuses on when to use it, how to install it, how to run the first example, and what to verify before adopting it.

Repository license: MITCommercial use permitted, review additional terms

Key features

  • Implemented mainly in Python, useful for judging integration effort in a similar stack.
  • GitHub detected the MIT repository license, which generally permits commercial use. This signal only covers the repository license; review its obligations and any model weights, datasets, dependencies, or external services before commercial adoption.
  • GitHub is the main evaluation surface; review the README, issues, and recent commits first.

Best for

  • Evaluating Vibe-Trading for Python AI workflows.
  • Comparing a GitHub project with 3 stars and current repository activity.

Pros

  • Vibe-Trading has visible GitHub traction with 3 stars.
  • The GitHub repository is the primary evaluation surface.

Cons

  • Production fit still depends on documentation depth, issue activity, and release cadence.
  • License review should confirm the MIT terms fit your use case.

Production readiness

Vibe-Trading should be validated with its README, release history, open issues, and integration requirements before production use.

License risk

MIT is reported by GitHub; review the repository license before redistribution or commercial use.

Vibe-Trading architecture preview

Vibe-Trading's main path starts at the entry surface, runs through Agent orchestration runtime, combines LLM / model client, Runtime context, GitHub, and returns Assistant response / action result.

Entry

Repository setup

Vibe-Trading starts from the repository setup path and documented examples.

git clone https://github.com/HKUDS/Vibe-Trading.git

Runtime

Agent orchestration runtime

The orchestration layer plans tasks, calls tools, manages context, and decides the next action.

agent workflow

Runtime dependencies

Model

LLM / model client

The project connects its core runtime to local models or hosted AI APIs when model inference is required.

model signal

Context

Runtime context

Runtime state, user input, repository files, or configuration provide context for each task.

context signal

Tools

GitHub

Tool adapters let the runtime act outside the model through GitHub.

GitHub

Output

Assistant response / action result

The final result is a response, action, or task completion returned through the active channel.

assistant output

Install tutorial

Before you install

  • Python runtime and an isolated virtual environment
  • A clean working directory for the first test run
1
Step 1

Check the runtime environment

Vibe-Trading depends on a Python-style environment. Use venv, conda, or a container to keep dependencies isolated.

2
Step 2

Get the project files

Start from the official repository or package so the first run matches the documented behavior.

terminal
$ git clone https://github.com/HKUDS/Vibe-Trading.git
3
Step 3

Install or build dependencies

No extra setup command was detected. Check the README before adding custom configuration.

Adoption guidance and sources

Practical use cases

Agent workflow prototype

Use it to validate task decomposition, tool calling, memory, tool permissions, and result review loops.

"Vibe-Trading: Your Personal Trading Agent"

This is one of the documented reasons to evaluate Vibe-Trading before choosing a stack.

AI Agents project comparison

Compare Vibe-Trading with similar projects before committing to a stack.

Before adopting

  • Complete one clean-environment verification using the official Vibe-Trading setup path.
  • Review repository license, model weights, external services, and dependency terms for your use case.
  • Check recent commits, release cadence, issue response, and documentation depth.
  • Evaluate output quality, latency, resource usage, and recovery behavior with a small dataset.

Configuration notes

  • Review README configuration notes before using production data.

Sources checked

These links are used to verify repository, documentation, or tutorial details. Review the source pages before adopting the project.

Troubleshooting

  • If installation fails, first confirm the command is being run from the README-specified directory.
  • If dependencies conflict, retry in a fresh virtual environment, container, or working directory.
  • If output looks wrong, return to the smallest documented Vibe-Trading example before adding complex data.
  • For keys, model files, or external services, verify environment variables, local paths, and permissions one by one.
  • Before production use, review recent updates, open issues, license terms, and safety boundaries.
What is Vibe-Trading?

Vibe-Trading is an open-source ai agents project. "Vibe-Trading: Your Personal Trading Agent"

How do I install Vibe-Trading?

Start with the official README. The first detected setup step is: git clone https://github.com/HKUDS/Vibe-Trading.git.

Is Vibe-Trading beginner-friendly?

If you already know the Python ecosystem, start with the smallest example. Otherwise test it in an isolated environment first.

Can Vibe-Trading be used commercially?

GitHub detected the MIT repository license, which generally permits commercial use. This signal only covers the repository license; review its obligations and any model weights, datasets, dependencies, or external services before commercial adoption.

Does Vibe-Trading need a GPU?

GPU requirements depend on the workload, model, and dataset size. Start with the smallest README example before scaling up.

How should I decide whether to adopt Vibe-Trading?

Evaluate setup cost, maintenance activity, issue health, license terms, and fit with your real workflow.

Star trend

37k14k06-0306-1807-03