In an effort to better understand how market exchanges work, I was attempting to learn how orders get executed on NASDAQ. The following quote is from their website (click here to view):
NASDAQ features a price/time priority model where the execution logic is fair and transparent for all market participants. All displayed limit orders are treated equally and executed in the order in which they were received at the same price. Non-displayed shares are executed after displayed shares in the order in which they were received at that price.
Could someone explain what display and non-display limit orders are? I know that placing a limit order is essentially offering a bid or ask price for a transaction, but I don't really know what display and non-display mean...