Komut dosyalarını "股价站上60月线" için ara
[STRATEGY]EMA 30/60 Cross Strategystrategy based on EMA 30/60 cross
works best on 4hr timeframes & high-midcaps
120/60 Trend ModelCombination of 120 & 60 EMAs used to determine entries as well as the over all trend.
Guppy MMA 3, 5, 8, 10, 12, 15 and 30, 35, 40, 45, 50, 60Guppy Multiple Moving Average
Short Term EMA 3, 5, 8, 10, 12, 15
Long Term EMA 30, 35, 40, 45, 50, 60
Use for SFTS Class
TF + Ticker (vahab)Fixed Timeframe Display with Custom Colors & Size
This indicator displays the current chart timeframe in the bottom-right corner with clear formatting. Features include:
Automatic conversion of minute-based timeframes to hours (e.g., 60 → 1H, 240 → 4H).
Distinguishes seconds, minutes, hours, and daily/weekly/monthly timeframes.
Fully customizable colors for each type of timeframe.
Adjustable font size for readability.
Simple, stable, and lightweight overlay.
Perfect for traders who want an easy-to-read timeframe display without cluttering the chart.
PineConnectorLibrary "PineConnector"
This library is a comprehensive alert webhook text generator for PineConnector. It contains every possible alert syntax variation from the documentation, along with some debugging functions.
To use it, just import the library (eg. "import ZenAndTheArtOfTrading/PineConnector/1 as pc") and use pc.buy(licenseID) to send an alert off to PineConnector - assuming all your webhooks etc are set up correctly.
View the PineConnector documentation for more information on how to send the commands you're looking to send (all of this library's function names match the documentation).
all()
Usage: pc.buy(pc_id, freq=pc.all())
Returns: "all"
once_per_bar()
Usage: pc.buy(pc_id, freq=pc.once_per_bar())
Returns: "once_per_bar"
once_per_bar_close()
Usage: pc.buy(pc_id, freq=pc.once_per_bar_close())
Returns: "once_per_bar_close"
na0(value)
Checks if given value is either 'na' or 0. Useful for streamlining scripts with float user setting inputs which default values to 0 since na is unavailable as a user input default.
Parameters:
value (float) : The value to check
Returns: True if the given value is 0 or na
getDecimals()
Calculates how many decimals are on the quote price of the current market.
Returns: The current decimal places on the market quote price
truncate(number, decimals)
Truncates the given number. Required params: mumber.
Parameters:
number (float) : Number to truncate
decimals (int) : Decimal places to cut down to
Returns: The input number, but as a string truncated to X decimals
getPipSize(multiplier)
Calculates the pip size of the current market.
Parameters:
multiplier (int) : The mintick point multiplier (1 by default, 10 for FX/Crypto/CFD but can be used to override when certain markets require)
Returns: The pip size for the current market
toWhole(number)
Converts pips into whole numbers. Required params: number.
Parameters:
number (float) : The pip number to convert into a whole number
Returns: The converted number
toPips(number)
Converts whole numbers back into pips. Required params: number.
Parameters:
number (float) : The whole number to convert into pips
Returns: The converted number
debug(txt, tooltip, displayLabel)
Prints to console and generates a debug label with the given text. Required params: txt.
Parameters:
txt (string) : Text to display
tooltip (string) : Tooltip to display (optional)
displayLabel (bool) : Turns on/off chart label (default: off)
Returns: Nothing
order(licenseID, command, symbol, parameters, accfilter, comment, secret, freq, debug)
Generates an alert string. Required params: licenseID, command.
Parameters:
licenseID (string) : Your PC license ID
command (string) : Command to send
symbol (string) : The symbol to trigger this order on
parameters (string) : Other optional parameters to include
accfilter (float) : Optional minimum account balance filter
comment (string) : Optional comment (maximum 20 characters)
secret (string) : Optional secret key (must be enabled in dashboard)
freq (string) : Alert frequency. Default = "all", options = "once_per_bar", "once_per_bar_close" and "none"
debug (bool) : Turns on/off debug label
Returns: An alert string with valid PC syntax based on supplied parameters
market_order(licenseID, buy, risk, sl, tp, betrigger, beoffset, spread, trailtrig, traildist, trailstep, atrtimeframe, atrperiod, atrmultiplier, atrshift, atrtrigger, symbol, accfilter, comment, secret, freq, debug)
Generates a market entry alert with relevant syntax commands. Required params: licenseID, buy, risk.
Parameters:
licenseID (string) : Your PC license ID
buy (bool) : true=buy/long, false=sell/short
risk (float) : Risk quantity (according to EA settings)
sl (float) : Stop loss distance in pips or price
tp (float) : Take profit distance in pips or price
betrigger (float) : Breakeven will be activated after the position gains this number of pips
beoffset (float) : Offset from entry price. This is the amount of pips you'd like to protect
spread (float) : Enter the position only if the spread is equal or less than the specified value in pips
trailtrig (float) : Trailing stop-loss will be activated after a trade gains this number of pips
traildist (float) : Distance of the trailing stop-loss from current price
trailstep (float) : Moves trailing stop-loss once price moves to favourable by a specified number of pips
atrtimeframe (int) : ATR Trailing Stop timeframe, only updates once per bar close. Options: 1, 5, 15, 30, 60, 240, 1440
atrperiod (int) : ATR averaging period
atrmultiplier (float) : Multiple of ATR to utilise in the new SL computation, default = 1
atrshift (int) : Relative shift of price information, 0 uses latest candle, 1 uses second last, etc. Default = 0
atrtrigger (int) : Activate the trigger of ATR Trailing after market moves favourably by a number of pips. Default = 0 (instant)
symbol (string) : The symbol to trigger this order on (defaults to current symbol)
accfilter (float) : Optional minimum account balance filter
comment (string) : Optional comment (maximum 20 characters)
secret (string) : Optional secret key (must be enabled in dashboard)
freq (string) : Alert frequency. Default = "all", options = "once_per_bar", "once_per_bar_close" and "none"
debug (bool) : Turns on/off debug label
Returns: A market order alert string with valid PC syntax based on supplied parameters
buy(licenseID, risk, sl, tp, betrigger, beoffset, spread, trailtrig, traildist, trailstep, atrtimeframe, atrperiod, atrmultiplier, atrshift, atrtrigger, symbol, accfilter, comment, secret, freq, debug)
Generates a market buy alert with relevant syntax commands. Required params: licenseID, risk.
Parameters:
licenseID (string) : Your PC license ID
risk (float) : Risk quantity (according to EA settings)
sl (float) : Stop loss distance in pips or price
tp (float) : Take profit distance in pips or price
betrigger (float) : Breakeven will be activated after the position gains this number of pips
beoffset (float) : Offset from entry price. This is the amount of pips you'd like to protect
spread (float) : Enter the position only if the spread is equal or less than the specified value in pips
trailtrig (float) : Trailing stop-loss will be activated after a trade gains this number of pips
traildist (float) : Distance of the trailing stop-loss from current price
trailstep (float) : Moves trailing stop-loss once price moves to favourable by a specified number of pips
atrtimeframe (int) : ATR Trailing Stop timeframe, only updates once per bar close. Options: 1, 5, 15, 30, 60, 240, 1440
atrperiod (int) : ATR averaging period
atrmultiplier (float) : Multiple of ATR to utilise in the new SL computation, default = 1
atrshift (int) : Relative shift of price information, 0 uses latest candle, 1 uses second last, etc. Default = 0
atrtrigger (int) : Activate the trigger of ATR Trailing after market moves favourably by a number of pips. Default = 0 (instant)
symbol (string) : The symbol to trigger this order on (defaults to current symbol)
accfilter (float) : Optional minimum account balance filter
comment (string) : Optional comment (maximum 20 characters)
secret (string) : Optional secret key (must be enabled in dashboard)
freq (string) : Alert frequency. Default = "all", options = "once_per_bar", "once_per_bar_close" and "none"
debug (bool) : Turns on/off debug label
Returns: A market order alert string with valid PC syntax based on supplied parameters
sell(licenseID, risk, sl, tp, betrigger, beoffset, spread, trailtrig, traildist, trailstep, atrtimeframe, atrperiod, atrmultiplier, atrshift, atrtrigger, symbol, accfilter, comment, secret, freq, debug)
Generates a market sell alert with relevant syntax commands. Required params: licenseID, risk.
Parameters:
licenseID (string) : Your PC license ID
risk (float) : Risk quantity (according to EA settings)
sl (float) : Stop loss distance in pips or price
tp (float) : Take profit distance in pips or price
betrigger (float) : Breakeven will be activated after the position gains this number of pips
beoffset (float) : Offset from entry price. This is the amount of pips you'd like to protect
spread (float) : Enter the position only if the spread is equal or less than the specified value in pips
trailtrig (float) : Trailing stop-loss will be activated after a trade gains this number of pips
traildist (float) : Distance of the trailing stop-loss from current price
trailstep (float) : Moves trailing stop-loss once price moves to favourable by a specified number of pips
atrtimeframe (int) : ATR Trailing Stop timeframe, only updates once per bar close. Options: 1, 5, 15, 30, 60, 240, 1440
atrperiod (int) : ATR averaging period
atrmultiplier (float) : Multiple of ATR to utilise in the new SL computation, default = 1
atrshift (int) : Relative shift of price information, 0 uses latest candle, 1 uses second last, etc. Default = 0
atrtrigger (int) : Activate the trigger of ATR Trailing after market moves favourably by a number of pips. Default = 0 (instant)
symbol (string) : The symbol to trigger this order on (defaults to current symbol)
accfilter (float) : Optional minimum account balance filter
comment (string) : Optional comment (maximum 20 characters)
secret (string) : Optional secret key (must be enabled in dashboard)
freq (string) : Alert frequency. Default = "all", options = "once_per_bar", "once_per_bar_close" and "none"
debug (bool) : Turns on/off debug label
Returns: A market order alert string with valid PC syntax based on supplied parameters
closeall(licenseID, comment, secret, freq, debug)
Closes all open trades at market regardless of symbol. Required params: licenseID.
Parameters:
licenseID (string) : Your PC license ID
comment (string) : Optional comment to include (max 20 characters)
secret (string) : Optional secret key (must be enabled in dashboard)
freq (string) : Alert frequency. Default = "all", options = "once_per_bar", "once_per_bar_close" and "none"
debug (bool) : Turns on/off debug label
Returns: The required alert syntax as a string
closealleaoff(licenseID, comment, secret, freq, debug)
Closes all open trades at market regardless of symbol, and turns the EA off. Required params: licenseID.
Parameters:
licenseID (string) : Your PC license ID
comment (string) : Optional comment to include (max 20 characters)
secret (string) : Optional secret key (must be enabled in dashboard)
freq (string) : Alert frequency. Default = "all", options = "once_per_bar", "once_per_bar_close" and "none"
debug (bool) : Turns on/off debug label
Returns: The required alert syntax as a string
closelong(licenseID, symbol, comment, secret, freq, debug)
Closes all long trades at market for the given symbol. Required params: licenseID.
Parameters:
licenseID (string) : Your PC license ID
symbol (string) : Symbol to act on (defaults to current symbol)
comment (string) : Optional comment to include (max 20 characters)
secret (string) : Optional secret key (must be enabled in dashboard)
freq (string) : Alert frequency. Default = "all", options = "once_per_bar", "once_per_bar_close" and "none"
debug (bool) : Turns on/off debug label
Returns: The required alert syntax as a string
closeshort(licenseID, symbol, comment, secret, freq, debug)
Closes all open short trades at market for the given symbol. Required params: licenseID.
Parameters:
licenseID (string) : Your PC license ID
symbol (string) : Symbol to act on (defaults to current symbol)
comment (string) : Optional comment to include (max 20 characters)
secret (string) : Optional secret key (must be enabled in dashboard)
freq (string) : Alert frequency. Default = "all", options = "once_per_bar", "once_per_bar_close" and "none"
debug (bool) : Turns on/off debug label
Returns: The required alert syntax as a string
closelongshort(licenseID, symbol, comment, secret, freq, debug)
Closes all open trades at market for the given symbol. Required params: licenseID.
Parameters:
licenseID (string) : Your PC license ID
symbol (string) : Symbol to act on (defaults to current symbol)
comment (string) : Optional comment to include (max 20 characters)
secret (string) : Optional secret key (must be enabled in dashboard)
freq (string) : Alert frequency. Default = "all", options = "once_per_bar", "once_per_bar_close" and "none"
debug (bool) : Turns on/off debug label
Returns: The required alert syntax as a string
closelongbuy(licenseID, risk, symbol, comment, secret, freq, debug)
Close all long positions and open a new long at market for the given symbol with given risk/contracts. Required params: licenseID.
Parameters:
licenseID (string) : Your PC license ID
risk (float) : Risk or contracts (according to EA settings)
symbol (string) : Symbol to act on (defaults to current symbol)
comment (string) : Optional comment to include (max 20 characters)
secret (string) : Optional secret key (must be enabled in dashboard)
freq (string) : Alert frequency. Default = "all", options = "once_per_bar", "once_per_bar_close" and "none"
debug (bool) : Turns on/off debug label
Returns: The required alert syntax as a string
closeshortsell(licenseID, risk, symbol, comment, secret, freq, debug)
Close all short positions and open a new short at market for the given symbol with given risk/contracts. Required params: licenseID, risk.
Parameters:
licenseID (string) : Your PC license ID
risk (float) : Risk or contracts (according to EA settings)
symbol (string) : Symbol to act on (defaults to current symbol)
comment (string) : Optional comment to include (max 20 characters)
secret (string) : Optional secret key (must be enabled in dashboard)
freq (string) : Alert frequency. Default = "all", options = "once_per_bar", "once_per_bar_close" and "none"
debug (bool) : Turns on/off debug label
Returns: The required alert syntax as a string
newsltplong(licenseID, sl, tp, symbol, accfilter, comment, secret, freq, debug)
Updates the stop loss and/or take profit of any open long trades on the given symbol with the given values. Required params: licenseID, sl and/or tp.
Parameters:
licenseID (string) : Your PC license ID
sl (float) : Stop loss pips or price (according to EA settings)
tp (float) : Take profit pips or price (according to EA settings)
symbol (string) : Symbol to act on (defaults to current symbol)
accfilter (float) : Optional minimum account balance filter
comment (string) : Optional comment to include (max 20 characters)
secret (string) : Optional secret key (must be enabled in dashboard)
freq (string) : Alert frequency. Default = "all", options = "once_per_bar", "once_per_bar_close" and "none"
debug (bool) : Turns on/off debug label
Returns: The required alert syntax as a string
newsltpshort(licenseID, sl, tp, symbol, accfilter, comment, secret, freq, debug)
Updates the stop loss and/or take profit of any open short trades on the given symbol with the given values. Required params: licenseID, sl and/or tp.
Parameters:
licenseID (string) : Your PC license ID
sl (float) : Stop loss pips or price (according to EA settings)
tp (float) : Take profit pips or price (according to EA settings)
symbol (string) : Symbol to act on (defaults to current symbol)
accfilter (float) : Optional minimum account balance filter
comment (string) : Optional comment to include (max 20 characters)
secret (string) : Optional secret key (must be enabled in dashboard)
freq (string) : Alert frequency. Default = "all", options = "once_per_bar", "once_per_bar_close" and "none"
debug (bool) : Turns on/off debug label
Returns: The required alert syntax as a string
closelongpct(licenseID, symbol, comment, secret, freq, debug)
Close a percentage of open long positions (according to EA settings). Required params: licenseID.
Parameters:
licenseID (string) : Your PC license ID
symbol (string) : Symbol to act on (defaults to current symbol)
comment (string) : Optional comment to include (max 20 characters)
secret (string) : Optional secret key (must be enabled in dashboard)
freq (string) : Alert frequency. Default = "all", options = "once_per_bar", "once_per_bar_close" and "none"
debug (bool) : Turns on/off debug label
Returns: The required alert syntax as a string
closeshortpct(licenseID, symbol, comment, secret, freq, debug)
Close a percentage of open short positions (according to EA settings). Required params: licenseID.
Parameters:
licenseID (string) : Your PC license ID
symbol (string) : Symbol to act on (defaults to current symbol)
comment (string) : Optional comment to include (max 20 characters)
secret (string) : Optional secret key (must be enabled in dashboard)
freq (string) : Alert frequency. Default = "all", options = "once_per_bar", "once_per_bar_close" and "none"
debug (bool) : Turns on/off debug label
Returns: The required alert syntax as a string
closelongvol(licenseID, risk, symbol, comment, secret, freq, debug)
Close all open long contracts on the current symbol until the given risk value is remaining. Required params: licenseID, risk.
Parameters:
licenseID (string) : Your PC license ID
risk (float) : The quantity to leave remaining
symbol (string) : Symbol to act on (defaults to current symbol)
comment (string) : Optional comment to include (max 20 characters)
secret (string) : Optional secret key (must be enabled in dashboard)
freq (string) : Alert frequency. Default = "all", options = "once_per_bar", "once_per_bar_close" and "none"
debug (bool) : Turns on/off debug label
Returns: The required alert syntax as a string
closeshortvol(licenseID, risk, symbol, comment, secret, freq, debug)
Close all open short contracts on the current symbol until the given risk value is remaining. Required params: licenseID, risk.
Parameters:
licenseID (string) : Your PC license ID
risk (float) : The quantity to leave remaining
symbol (string) : Symbol to act on (defaults to current symbol)
comment (string) : Optional comment to include (max 20 characters)
secret (string) : Optional secret key (must be enabled in dashboard)
freq (string) : Alert frequency. Default = "all", options = "once_per_bar", "once_per_bar_close" and "none"
debug (bool) : Turns on/off debug label
Returns: The required alert syntax as a string
limit_order(licenseID, buy, price, risk, sl, tp, betrigger, beoffset, spread, trailtrig, traildist, trailstep, atrtimeframe, atrperiod, atrmultiplier, atrshift, atrtrigger, symbol, accfilter, comment, secret, freq, debug)
Generates a limit order alert with relevant syntax commands. Required params: licenseID, buy, price, risk.
Parameters:
licenseID (string) : Your PC license ID
buy (bool) : true=buy/long, false=sell/short
price (float) : Price or pips to set limit order (according to EA settings)
risk (float) : Risk quantity (according to EA settings)
sl (float) : Stop loss distance in pips or price
tp (float) : Take profit distance in pips or price
betrigger (float) : Breakeven will be activated after the position gains this number of pips
beoffset (float) : Offset from entry price. This is the amount of pips you'd like to protect
spread (float) : Enter the position only if the spread is equal or less than the specified value in pips
trailtrig (float) : Trailing stop-loss will be activated after a trade gains this number of pips
traildist (float) : Distance of the trailing stop-loss from current price
trailstep (float) : Moves trailing stop-loss once price moves to favourable by a specified number of pips
atrtimeframe (int) : ATR Trailing Stop timeframe, only updates once per bar close. Options: 1, 5, 15, 30, 60, 240, 1440
atrperiod (int) : ATR averaging period
atrmultiplier (float) : Multiple of ATR to utilise in the new SL computation, default = 1
atrshift (int) : Relative shift of price information, 0 uses latest candle, 1 uses second last, etc. Default = 0
atrtrigger (int) : Activate the trigger of ATR Trailing after market moves favourably by a number of pips. Default = 0 (instant)
symbol (string) : The symbol to trigger this order on (defaults to current symbol)
accfilter (float) : Optional minimum account balance filter
comment (string) : Optional comment (maximum 20 characters)
secret (string) : Optional secret key (must be enabled in dashboard)
freq (string) : Alert frequency. Default = "all", options = "once_per_bar", "once_per_bar_close" and "none"
debug (bool) : Turns on/off debug label
Returns: A limit order alert string with valid PC syntax based on supplied parameters
buylimit(licenseID, price, risk, sl, tp, betrigger, beoffset, spread, trailtrig, traildist, trailstep, atrtimeframe, atrperiod, atrmultiplier, atrshift, atrtrigger, symbol, accfilter, comment, secret, freq, debug)
Generates a buylimit order alert with relevant syntax commands. Required params: licenseID, price, risk.
Parameters:
licenseID (string) : Your PC license ID
price (float) : Price or pips to set limit order (according to EA settings)
risk (float) : Risk quantity (according to EA settings)
sl (float) : Stop loss distance in pips or price
tp (float) : Take profit distance in pips or price
betrigger (float) : Breakeven will be activated after the position gains this number of pips
beoffset (float) : Offset from entry price. This is the amount of pips you'd like to protect
spread (float) : Enter the position only if the spread is equal or less than the specified value in pips
trailtrig (float) : Trailing stop-loss will be activated after a trade gains this number of pips
traildist (float) : Distance of the trailing stop-loss from current price
trailstep (float) : Moves trailing stop-loss once price moves to favourable by a specified number of pips
atrtimeframe (int) : ATR Trailing Stop timeframe, only updates once per bar close. Options: 1, 5, 15, 30, 60, 240, 1440
atrperiod (int) : ATR averaging period
atrmultiplier (float) : Multiple of ATR to utilise in the new SL computation, default = 1
atrshift (int) : Relative shift of price information, 0 uses latest candle, 1 uses second last, etc. Default = 0
atrtrigger (int) : Activate the trigger of ATR Trailing after market moves favourably by a number of pips. Default = 0 (instant)
symbol (string) : The symbol to trigger this order on (defaults to current symbol)
accfilter (float) : Optional minimum account balance filter
comment (string) : Optional comment (maximum 20 characters)
secret (string) : Optional secret key (must be enabled in dashboard)
freq (string) : Alert frequency. Default = "all", options = "once_per_bar", "once_per_bar_close" and "none"
debug (bool) : Turns on/off debug label
Returns: A limit order alert string with valid PC syntax based on supplied parameters
selllimit(licenseID, price, risk, sl, tp, betrigger, beoffset, spread, trailtrig, traildist, trailstep, atrtimeframe, atrperiod, atrmultiplier, atrshift, atrtrigger, symbol, accfilter, comment, secret, freq, debug)
Generates a selllimit order alert with relevant syntax commands. Required params: licenseID, price, risk.
Parameters:
licenseID (string) : Your PC license ID
price (float) : Price or pips to set limit order (according to EA settings)
risk (float) : Risk quantity (according to EA settings)
sl (float) : Stop loss distance in pips or price
tp (float) : Take profit distance in pips or price
betrigger (float) : Breakeven will be activated after the position gains this number of pips
beoffset (float) : Offset from entry price. This is the amount of pips you'd like to protect
spread (float) : Enter the position only if the spread is equal or less than the specified value in pips
trailtrig (float) : Trailing stop-loss will be activated after a trade gains this number of pips
traildist (float) : Distance of the trailing stop-loss from current price
trailstep (float) : Moves trailing stop-loss once price moves to favourable by a specified number of pips
atrtimeframe (int) : ATR Trailing Stop timeframe, only updates once per bar close. Options: 1, 5, 15, 30, 60, 240, 1440
atrperiod (int) : ATR averaging period
atrmultiplier (float) : Multiple of ATR to utilise in the new SL computation, default = 1
atrshift (int) : Relative shift of price information, 0 uses latest candle, 1 uses second last, etc. Default = 0
atrtrigger (int) : Activate the trigger of ATR Trailing after market moves favourably by a number of pips. Default = 0 (instant)
symbol (string) : The symbol to trigger this order on (defaults to current symbol)
accfilter (float) : Optional minimum account balance filter
comment (string) : Optional comment (maximum 20 characters)
secret (string) : Optional secret key (must be enabled in dashboard)
freq (string) : Alert frequency. Default = "all", options = "once_per_bar", "once_per_bar_close" and "none"
debug (bool) : Turns on/off debug label
Returns: A limit order alert string with valid PC syntax based on supplied parameters
stop_order(licenseID, buy, price, risk, sl, tp, betrigger, beoffset, spread, trailtrig, traildist, trailstep, atrtimeframe, atrperiod, atrmultiplier, atrshift, atrtrigger, symbol, accfilter, comment, secret, freq, debug)
Generates a stop order alert with relevant syntax commands. Required params: licenseID, buy, price, risk.
Parameters:
licenseID (string) : Your PC license ID
buy (bool) : true=buy/long, false=sell/short
price (float) : Price or pips to set limit order (according to EA settings)
risk (float) : Risk quantity (according to EA settings)
sl (float) : Stop loss distance in pips or price
tp (float) : Take profit distance in pips or price
betrigger (float) : Breakeven will be activated after the position gains this number of pips
beoffset (float) : Offset from entry price. This is the amount of pips you'd like to protect
spread (float) : Enter the position only if the spread is equal or less than the specified value in pips
trailtrig (float) : Trailing stop-loss will be activated after a trade gains this number of pips
traildist (float) : Distance of the trailing stop-loss from current price
trailstep (float) : Moves trailing stop-loss once price moves to favourable by a specified number of pips
atrtimeframe (int) : ATR Trailing Stop timeframe, only updates once per bar close. Options: 1, 5, 15, 30, 60, 240, 1440
atrperiod (int) : ATR averaging period
atrmultiplier (float) : Multiple of ATR to utilise in the new SL computation, default = 1
atrshift (int) : Relative shift of price information, 0 uses latest candle, 1 uses second last, etc. Default = 0
atrtrigger (int) : Activate the trigger of ATR Trailing after market moves favourably by a number of pips. Default = 0 (instant)
symbol (string) : The symbol to trigger this order on (defaults to current symbol)
accfilter (float) : Optional minimum account balance filter
comment (string) : Optional comment (maximum 20 characters)
secret (string) : Optional secret key (must be enabled in dashboard)
freq (string) : Alert frequency. Default = "all", options = "once_per_bar", "once_per_bar_close" and "none"
debug (bool) : Turns on/off debug label
Returns: A stop order alert string with valid PC syntax based on supplied parameters
buystop(licenseID, price, risk, sl, tp, betrigger, beoffset, spread, trailtrig, traildist, trailstep, atrtimeframe, atrperiod, atrmultiplier, atrshift, atrtrigger, symbol, accfilter, comment, secret, freq, debug)
Generates a buystop order alert with relevant syntax commands. Required params: licenseID, price, risk.
Parameters:
licenseID (string) : Your PC license ID
price (float) : Price or pips to set limit order (according to EA settings)
risk (float) : Risk quantity (according to EA settings)
sl (float) : Stop loss distance in pips or price
tp (float) : Take profit distance in pips or price
betrigger (float) : Breakeven will be activated after the position gains this number of pips
beoffset (float) : Offset from entry price. This is the amount of pips you'd like to protect
spread (float) : Enter the position only if the spread is equal or less than the specified value in pips
trailtrig (float) : Trailing stop-loss will be activated after a trade gains this number of pips
traildist (float) : Distance of the trailing stop-loss from current price
trailstep (float) : Moves trailing stop-loss once price moves to favourable by a specified number of pips
atrtimeframe (int) : ATR Trailing Stop timeframe, only updates once per bar close. Options: 1, 5, 15, 30, 60, 240, 1440
atrperiod (int) : ATR averaging period
atrmultiplier (float) : Multiple of ATR to utilise in the new SL computation, default = 1
atrshift (int) : Relative shift of price information, 0 uses latest candle, 1 uses second last, etc. Default = 0
atrtrigger (int) : Activate the trigger of ATR Trailing after market moves favourably by a number of pips. Default = 0 (instant)
symbol (string) : The symbol to trigger this order on (defaults to current symbol)
accfilter (float) : Optional minimum account balance filter
comment (string) : Optional comment (maximum 20 characters)
secret (string) : Optional secret key (must be enabled in dashboard)
freq (string) : Alert frequency. Default = "all", options = "once_per_bar", "once_per_bar_close" and "none"
debug (bool) : Turns on/off debug label
Returns: A stop order alert string with valid PC syntax based on supplied parameters
sellstop(licenseID, price, risk, sl, tp, betrigger, beoffset, spread, trailtrig, traildist, trailstep, atrtimeframe, atrperiod, atrmultiplier, atrshift, atrtrigger, symbol, accfilter, comment, secret, freq, debug)
Generates a sellstop order alert with relevant syntax commands. Required params: licenseID, price, risk.
Parameters:
licenseID (string) : Your PC license ID
price (float) : Price or pips to set limit order (according to EA settings)
risk (float) : Risk quantity (according to EA settings)
sl (float) : Stop loss distance in pips or price
tp (float) : Take profit distance in pips or price
betrigger (float) : Breakeven will be activated after the position gains this number of pips
beoffset (float) : Offset from entry price. This is the amount of pips you'd like to protect
spread (float) : Enter the position only if the spread is equal or less than the specified value in pips
trailtrig (float) : Trailing stop-loss will be activated after a trade gains this number of pips
traildist (float) : Distance of the trailing stop-loss from current price
trailstep (float) : Moves trailing stop-loss once price moves to favourable by a specified number of pips
atrtimeframe (int) : ATR Trailing Stop timeframe, only updates once per bar close. Options: 1, 5, 15, 30, 60, 240, 1440
atrperiod (int) : ATR averaging period
atrmultiplier (float) : Multiple of ATR to utilise in the new SL computation, default = 1
atrshift (int) : Relative shift of price information, 0 uses latest candle, 1 uses second last, etc. Default = 0
atrtrigger (int) : Activate the trigger of ATR Trailing after market moves favourably by a number of pips. Default = 0 (instant)
symbol (string) : The symbol to trigger this order on (defaults to current symbol)
accfilter (float) : Optional minimum account balance filter
comment (string) : Optional comment (maximum 20 characters)
secret (string) : Optional secret key (must be enabled in dashboard)
freq (string) : Alert frequency. Default = "all", options = "once_per_bar", "once_per_bar_close" and "none"
debug (bool) : Turns on/off debug label
Returns: A stop order alert string with valid PC syntax based on supplied parameters
cancel_neworder(licenseID, order, price, risk, sl, tp, betrigger, beoffset, spread, trailtrig, traildist, trailstep, atrtimeframe, atrperiod, atrmultiplier, atrshift, atrtrigger, symbol, accfilter, comment, secret, freq, debug)
Cancel + place new order template function.
Parameters:
licenseID (string) : Your PC license ID
order (string) : Cancel order type
price (float) : Price or pips to set limit order (according to EA settings)
risk (float) : Risk quantity (according to EA settings)
sl (float) : Stop loss distance in pips or price
tp (float) : Take profit distance in pips or price
betrigger (float) : Breakeven will be activated after the position gains this number of pips
beoffset (float) : Offset from entry price. This is the amount of pips you'd like to protect
spread (float) : Enter the position only if the spread is equal or less than the specified value in pips
trailtrig (float) : Trailing stop-loss will be activated after a trade gains this number of pips
traildist (float) : Distance of the trailing stop-loss from current price
trailstep (float) : Moves trailing stop-loss once price moves to favourable by a specified number of pips
atrtimeframe (int) : ATR Trailing Stop timeframe, only updates once per bar close. Options: 1, 5, 15, 30, 60, 240, 1440
atrperiod (int) : ATR averaging period
atrmultiplier (float) : Multiple of ATR to utilise in the new SL computation, default = 1
atrshift (int) : Relative shift of price information, 0 uses latest candle, 1 uses second last, etc. Default = 0
atrtrigger (int) : Activate the trigger of ATR Trailing after market moves favourably by a number of pips. Default = 0 (instant)
symbol (string) : The symbol to trigger this order on (defaults to current symbol)
accfilter (float) : Optional minimum account balance filter
comment (string) : Optional comment (maximum 20 characters)
secret (string) : Optional secret key (must be enabled in dashboard)
freq (string) : Alert frequency. Default = "all", options = "once_per_bar", "once_per_bar_close" and "none"
debug (bool) : Turns on/off debug label
Returns: A stop order alert string with valid PC syntax based on supplied parameters
cancellongbuystop(licenseID, price, risk, sl, tp, betrigger, beoffset, spread, trailtrig, traildist, trailstep, atrtimeframe, atrperiod, atrmultiplier, atrshift, atrtrigger, symbol, accfilter, comment, secret, freq, debug)
Cancels all long orders with the specified symbol and places a new buystop order. Required params: licenseID, price, risk.
Parameters:
licenseID (string) : Your PC license ID
price (float) : Price or pips to set limit order (according to EA settings)
risk (float) : Risk quantity (according to EA settings)
sl (float) : Stop loss distance in pips or price
tp (float) : Take profit distance in pips or price
betrigger (float) : Breakeven will be activated after the position gains this number of pips
beoffset (float) : Offset from entry price. This is the amount of pips you'd like to protect
spread (float) : Enter the position only if the spread is equal or less than the specified value in pips
trailtrig (float) : Trailing stop-loss will be activated after a trade gains this number of pips
traildist (float) : Distance of the trailing stop-loss from current price
trailstep (float) : Moves trailing stop-loss once price moves to favourable by a specified number of pips
atrtimeframe (int) : ATR Trailing Stop timeframe, only updates once per bar close. Options: 1, 5, 15, 30, 60, 240, 1440
atrperiod (int) : ATR averaging period
atrmultiplier (float) : Multiple of ATR to utilise in the new SL computation, default = 1
atrshift (int) : Relative shift of price information, 0 uses latest candle, 1 uses second last, etc. Default = 0
atrtrigger (int) : Activate the trigger of ATR Trailing after market moves favourably by a number of pips. Default = 0 (instant)
symbol (string) : The symbol to trigger this order on (defaults to current symbol)
accfilter (float) : Optional minimum account balance filter
comment (string) : Optional comment (maximum 20 characters)
secret (string) : Optional secret key (must be enabled in dashboard)
freq (string) : Alert frequency. Default = "all", options = "once_per_bar", "once_per_bar_close" and "none"
debug (bool) : Turns on/off debug label
Returns: A stop order alert string with valid PC syntax based on supplied parameters
cancellongbuylimit(licenseID, price, risk, sl, tp, betrigger, beoffset, spread, trailtrig, traildist, trailstep, atrtimeframe, atrperiod, atrmultiplier, atrshift, atrtrigger, symbol, accfilter, comment, secret, freq, debug)
Cancels all long orders with the specified symbol and places a new buylimit order. Required params: licenseID, price, risk.
Parameters:
licenseID (string) : Your PC license ID
price (float) : Price or pips to set limit order (according to EA settings)
risk (float) : Risk quantity (according to EA settings)
sl (float) : Stop loss distance in pips or price
tp (float) : Take profit distance in pips or price
betrigger (float) : Breakeven will be activated after the position gains this number of pips
beoffset (float) : Offset from entry price. This is the amount of pips you'd like to protect
spread (float) : Enter the position only if the spread is equal or less than the specified value in pips
trailtrig (float) : Trailing stop-loss will be activated after a trade gains this number of pips
traildist (float) : Distance of the trailing stop-loss from current price
trailstep (float) : Moves trailing stop-loss once price moves to favourable by a specified number of pips
atrtimeframe (int) : ATR Trailing Stop timeframe, only updates once per bar close. Options: 1, 5, 15, 30, 60, 240, 1440
atrperiod (int) : ATR averaging period
atrmultiplier (float) : Multiple of ATR to utilise in the new SL computation, default = 1
atrshift (int) : Relative shift of price information, 0 uses latest candle, 1 uses second last, etc. Default = 0
atrtrigger (int) : Activate the trigger of ATR Trailing after market moves favourably by a number of pips. Default = 0 (instant)
symbol (string) : The symbol to trigger this order on (defaults to current symbol)
accfilter (float) : Optional minimum account balance filter
comment (string) : Optional comment (maximum 20 characters)
secret (string) : Optional secret key (must be enabled in dashboard)
freq (string) : Alert frequency. Default = "all", options = "once_per_bar", "once_per_bar_close" and "none"
debug (bool) : Turns on/off debug label
Returns: A stop order alert string with valid PC syntax based on supplied parameters
cancelshortsellstop(licenseID, price, risk, sl, tp, betrigger, beoffset, spread, trailtrig, traildist, trailstep, atrtimeframe, atrperiod, atrmultiplier, atrshift, atrtrigger, symbol, accfilter, comment, secret, freq, debug)
Cancels all short orders with the specified symbol and places a sellstop order. Required params: licenseID, price, risk.
Parameters:
licenseID (string) : Your PC license ID
price (float) : Price or pips to set limit order (according to EA settings)
risk (float) : Risk quantity (according to EA settings)
sl (float) : Stop loss distance in pips or price
tp (float) : Take profit distance in pips or price
betrigger (float) : Breakeven will be activated after the position gains this number of pips
beoffset (float) : Offset from entry price. This is the amount of pips you'd like to protect
spread (float) : Enter the position only if the spread is equal or less than the specified value in pips
trailtrig (float) : Trailing stop-loss will be activated after a trade gains this number of pips
traildist (float) : Distance of the trailing stop-loss from current price
trailstep (float) : Moves trailing stop-loss once price moves to favourable by a specified number of pips
atrtimeframe (int) : ATR Trailing Stop timeframe, only updates once per bar close. Options: 1, 5, 15, 30, 60, 240, 1440
atrperiod (int) : ATR averaging period
atrmultiplier (float) : Multiple of ATR to utilise in the new SL computation, default = 1
atrshift (int) : Relative shift of price information, 0 uses latest candle, 1 uses second last, etc. Default = 0
atrtrigger (int) : Activate the trigger of ATR Trailing after market moves favourably by a number of pips. Default = 0 (instant)
symbol (string) : The symbol to trigger this order on (defaults to current symbol)
accfilter (float) : Optional minimum account balance filter
comment (string) : Optional comment (maximum 20 characters)
secret (string) : Optional secret key (must be enabled in dashboard)
freq (string) : Alert frequency. Default = "all", options = "once_per_bar", "once_per_bar_close" and "none"
debug (bool) : Turns on/off debug label
Returns: A stop order alert string with valid PC syntax based on supplied parameters
cancelshortselllimit(licenseID, price, risk, sl, tp, betrigger, beoffset, spread, trailtrig, traildist, trailstep, atrtimeframe, atrperiod, atrmultiplier, atrshift, atrtrigger, symbol, accfilter, comment, secret, freq, debug)
Cancels all short orders with the specified symbol and places a selllimit order. Required params: licenseID, price, risk.
Parameters:
licenseID (string) : Your PC license ID
price (float) : Price or pips to set limit order (according to EA settings)
risk (float) : Risk quantity (according to EA settings)
sl (float) : Stop loss distance in pips or price
tp (float) : Take profit distance in pips or price
betrigger (float) : Breakeven will be activated after the position gains this number of pips
beoffset (float) : Offset from entry price. This is the amount of pips you'd like to protect
spread (float) : Enter the position only if the spread is equal or less than the specified value in pips
trailtrig (float) : Trailing stop-loss will be activated after a trade gains this number of pips
traildist (float) : Distance of the trailing stop-loss from current price
trailstep (float) : Moves trailing stop-loss once price moves to favourable by a specified number of pips
atrtimeframe (int) : ATR Trailing Stop timeframe, only updates once per bar close. Options: 1, 5, 15, 30, 60, 240, 1440
atrperiod (int) : ATR averaging period
atrmultiplier (float) : Multiple of ATR to utilise in the new SL computation, default = 1
atrshift (int) : Relative shift of price information, 0 uses latest candle, 1 uses second last, etc. Default = 0
atrtrigger (int) : Activate the trigger of ATR Trailing after market moves favourably by a number of pips. Default = 0 (instant)
symbol (string) : The symbol to trigger this order on (defaults to current symbol)
accfilter (float) : Optional minimum account balance filter
comment (string) : Optional comment (maximum 20 characters)
secret (string) : Optional secret key (must be enabled in dashboard)
freq (string) : Alert frequency. Default = "all", options = "once_per_bar", "once_per_bar_close" and "none"
debug (bool) : Turns on/off debug label
Returns: A stop order alert string with valid PC syntax based on supplied parameters
cancellong(licenseID, symbol, accfilter, comment, secret, freq, debug)
Cancels all pending long orders with the specified symbol. Required params: licenseID.
Parameters:
licenseID (string) : Your PC license ID
symbol (string) : Symbol to act on (defaults to current symbol)
accfilter (float) : Optional minimum account balance filter
comment (string) : Optional comment to include (max 20 characters)
secret (string) : Optional secret key (must be enabled in dashboard)
freq (string) : Alert frequency. Default = "all", options = "once_per_bar", "once_per_bar_close" and "none"
debug (bool) : Turns on/off debug label
Returns: A cancel long alert command
cancelshort(licenseID, symbol, accfilter, comment, secret, freq, debug)
Cancels all pending short orders with the specified symbol. Required params: licenseID.
Parameters:
licenseID (string) : Your PC license ID
symbol (string) : Symbol to act on (defaults to current symbol)
accfilter (float) : Optional minimum account balance filter
comment (string) : Optional comment to include (max 20 characters)
secret (string) : Optional secret key (must be enabled in dashboard)
freq (string) : Alert frequency. Default = "all", options = "once_per_bar", "once_per_bar_close" and "none"
debug (bool) : Turns on/off debug label
Returns: A cancel short alert command
newsltpbuystop(licenseID, sl, tp, symbol, accfilter, comment, secret, freq, debug)
Updates the stop loss and/or take profit of any pending buy stop orders on the given symbol. Required params: licenseID, sl and/or tp.
Parameters:
licenseID (string) : Your PC license ID
sl (float) : Stop loss pips or price (according to EA settings)
tp (float) : Take profit pips or price (according to EA settings)
symbol (string) : Symbol to act on (defaults to current symbol)
accfilter (float) : Optional minimum account balance filter
comment (string) : Optional comment to include (max 20 characters)
secret (string) : Optional secret key (must be enabled in dashboard)
freq (string) : Alert frequency. Default = "all", options = "once_per_bar", "once_per_bar_close" and "none"
debug (bool) : Turns on/off debug label
Returns: The required alert syntax as a string
newsltpbuylimit(licenseID, sl, tp, symbol, accfilter, comment, secret, freq, debug)
Updates the stop loss and/or take profit of any pending buy limit orders on the given symbol. Required params: licenseID, sl and/or tp.
Parameters:
licenseID (string) : Your PC license ID
sl (float) : Stop loss pips or price (according to EA settings)
tp (float) : Take profit pips or price (according to EA settings)
symbol (string) : Symbol to act on (defaults to current symbol)
accfilter (float) : Optional minimum account balance filter
comment (string) : Optional comment to include (max 20 characters)
secret (string) : Optional secret key (must be enabled in dashboard)
freq (string) : Alert frequency. Default = "all", options = "once_per_bar", "once_per_bar_close" and "none"
debug (bool) : Turns on/off debug label
Returns: The required alert syntax as a string
newsltpsellstop(licenseID, sl, tp, symbol, accfilter, comment, secret, freq, debug)
Updates the stop loss and/or take profit of any pending sell stop orders on the given symbol. Required params: licenseID, sl and/or tp.
Parameters:
licenseID (string) : Your PC license ID
sl (float) : Stop loss pips or price (according to EA settings)
tp (float) : Take profit pips or price (according to EA settings)
symbol (string) : Symbol to act on (defaults to current symbol)
accfilter (float) : Optional minimum account balance filter
comment (string) : Optional comment to include (max 20 characters)
secret (string) : Optional secret key (must be enabled in dashboard)
freq (string) : Alert frequency. Default = "all", options = "once_per_bar", "once_per_bar_close" and "none"
debug (bool) : Turns on/off debug label
Returns: The required alert syntax as a string
newsltpselllimit(licenseID, sl, tp, symbol, accfilter, comment, secret, freq, debug)
Updates the stop loss and/or take profit of any pending sell limit orders on the given symbol. Required params: licenseID, sl and/or tp.
Parameters:
licenseID (string) : Your PC license ID
sl (float) : Stop loss pips or price (according to EA settings)
tp (float) : Take profit pips or price (according to EA settings)
symbol (string) : Symbol to act on (defaults to current symbol)
accfilter (float) : Optional minimum account balance filter
comment (string) : Optional comment to include (max 20 characters)
secret (string) : Optional secret key (must be enabled in dashboard)
freq (string) : Alert frequency. Default = "all", options = "once_per_bar", "once_per_bar_close" and "none"
debug (bool) : Turns on/off debug label
Returns: The required alert syntax as a string
eaoff(licenseID, secret, freq, debug)
Turns the EA off. Required params: licenseID.
Parameters:
licenseID (string) : Your PC license ID
secret (string) : Optional secret key (must be enabled in dashboard)
freq (string) : Alert frequency. Default = "all", options = "once_per_bar", "once_per_bar_close" and "none"
debug (bool) : Turns on/off debug label
Returns: The required alert syntax as a string
eaon(licenseID, secret, freq, debug)
Turns the EA on. Required params: licenseID.
Parameters:
licenseID (string) : Your PC license ID
secret (string) : Optional secret key (must be enabled in dashboard)
freq (string) : Alert frequency. Default = "all", options = "once_per_bar", "once_per_bar_close" and "none"
debug (bool) : Turns on/off debug label
Returns: The required alert syntax as a string
VN30 Effort-vs-Result Multi-Scanner — LinhVN30 Effort-vs-Result Multi-Scanner (Pine v5)
Cross-section scanner for Vietnam’s VN30 stocks that surfaces Effort vs Result footprints and related accumulation/distribution and volatility tells. It renders a ranked table (Top-N) with per-ticker signals and key metrics.
What it does
Scans up to 30 tickers (editable input.symbol slots) using one security() call per symbol → stays under Pine’s 40-call limit and runs reliably on any chart.
Scores each ticker by counting active signals, then ranks and lists the top names.
Optional metrics columns: zVol(60), zTR(60), ATR(20), HL/ATR(20).
Signals (toggleable)
Price/Volume – Effort vs Result
EVR Squeeze (stealth): z(Vol,60) > 4 & z(TR,60) < −0.5
5σ Vol, ≤1σ Ret: z(Vol,60) > 5 & |z(Return,60)| < 1
Wide Effort, Opposite Result: z(Vol,60) > 3 & close < open & z(CLV×Vol,60) > 1
Spread Compression, Heavy Tape: (H−L)/ATR(20) < 0.6 & z(Vol,60) > 3
No-Supply / No-Demand: close < close & range < 0.6×ATR(20) & vol < 0.5×SMA(20)
Momentum & Volatility
Vol-of-Vol Kink: z(ATR20,200) rising & z(ATR5,60) falling
BB Squeeze → Expansion: BBWidth(20) in low regime (z<−1.3) then close > upper band & z(Vol,60) > 2
RSI Non-Confirmation: Price LL/HH with RSI HL/LH & z(Vol,60) > 1
Accumulation/Distribution
OBV Divergence w/ Flat Price: OBV slope > 0 & |z(ret20,260)| < 0.3
Accumulation Days Cluster: ≥3/5 bars: up close, higher vol, close near high
Effort-Result Inversion (Down): big vol on down day then next day close > prior high
How to use
Set the timeframe (works best on 1D for EOD scans).
Edit the 30 symbol slots to your VN30 constituents.
Choose Top N, toggle Show metrics/Only matches and enable/disable scenarios.
Read the table: Rank, Ticker, (metrics), Score, and comma-separated Signals fired.
Method notes
Z-scores use a population-std estimate; CLV×Vol is used for effort/location.
Rolling counts avoid ta.sum; OBV is computed manually; all logic is Pine v5-safe.
Intraday-only ideas (true VWAP magnets, auction volume, flows, futures/options) are not included—Pine can’t cross-scan those datasets.
Disclaimer: Educational tool, not financial advice. Always confirm signals on the chart and with your process.
RSI mura visionOverview
The Enhanced RSI with Custom 40/60 Zones is a Pine Script™ v6 open-source indicator that builds on the classic Relative Strength Index by adding two additional horizontal levels at 40 and 60, alongside the standard 30/70. These extra zones help you identify early momentum shifts and distinguish trending markets from ranging ones with greater precision.
Key Features & Originality
* Custom Mid-Zones (40/60): Standard RSI signals can be noisy around the 50 midpoint. By marking 40 as a “weak momentum” threshold and 60 as a “strong momentum” confirmation, you get clearer entry and exit cues.
* Color-Coded Zones: The RSI line changes color when crossing 40, 50, 60, 70, and 30, letting you visually spot momentum acceleration or deceleration.
* Configurable Alerts: Built-in alert conditions fire when RSI crosses 40 or 60 in either direction, so you never miss a potential trend onset or exhaustion.
* Lightweight & Clean: No external dependencies, no look-ahead bias, and minimal repainting—ideal for both novice and professional traders.
How It Works
1. Momentum Decomposition: The standard 14-period RSI measures overbought/oversold extremes. Adding 40/60 lets you see when momentum shifts from neutral to bullish (crossing above 60) or bearish (dropping below 40) earlier than the classic 70/30 thresholds.
2. Trend Confirmation vs. Pullbacks: Readings between 40–60 often correspond to healthy pullbacks within a trend. A bounce off 40 suggests continuation; a rejection at 60 warns of a deeper pullback or reversal.
Usage & Inputs
* RSI Length (default 14): Period for calculating RSI.
* Level Inputs: Customize levels for overbought (70), support (60), neutral (50), weak (40), and oversold (30).
* Alert Toggles: Enable/disable alerts on each cross.
Why This Adds Value
* Early Signals: Capture trend beginnings before the market reaches extreme overbought/oversold levels.
* Noise Reduction: Filter sideways chop by watching the 40–60 corridor.
* Flexibility: Works on any timeframe or ticker.
Pine Script™ Version: v6
Open-Source License: MPL-2.0
Feel free to fork, modify, and share.
Chuck Dukas Market Phases of Trends (based on 2 Moving Averages)This script is based on the article “Defining The Bull And The Bear” by Chuck Duckas, published in Stocks & Commodities V. 25:13 (14-22); (S&C Bonus Issue, 2007).
The article “Defining The Bull And The Bear” discusses the concepts of “bullish” and “bearish” in relation to the price behavior of financial instruments. Chuck Dukas explains the importance of analyzing price trends and provides a framework for categorizing price activity into six phases. These phases, including recovery, accumulation, bullish, warning, distribution, and bearish, help to assess the quality of the price structure and guide decision-making in trading. Moving averages are used as tools for determining the context preceding the current price action, and the slope of a moving average is seen as an indicator of trend and price phase analysis.
The six phases of trends
// Definitions of Market Phases
recovery_phase = src > ma050 and src < ma200 and ma050 < ma200 // color: blue
accumulation_phase = src > ma050 and src > ma200 and ma050 < ma200 // color: purple
bullish_phase = src > ma050 and src > ma200 and ma050 > ma200 // color: green
warning_phase = src < ma050 and src > ma200 and ma050 > ma200 // color: yellow
distribution_phase = src < ma050 and src < ma200 and ma050 > ma200 // color: orange
bearish_phase = src < ma050 and src < ma200 and ma050 < ma200 // color red
Recovery Phase : This phase marks the beginning of a new trend after a period of consolidation or downtrend. It is characterized by the gradual increase in prices as the market starts to recover from previous losses.
Accumulation Phase : In this phase, the market continues to build a base as prices stabilize before making a significant move. It is a period of consolidation where buying and selling are balanced.
Bullish Phase : The bullish phase indicates a strong upward trend in prices with higher highs and higher lows. It is a period of optimism and positive sentiment in the market.
Warning Phase : This phase occurs when the bullish trend starts to show signs of weakness or exhaustion. It serves as a cautionary signal to traders and investors that a potential reversal or correction may be imminent.
Distribution Phase : The distribution phase is characterized by the market topping out as selling pressure increases. It is a period where supply exceeds demand, leading to a potential shift in trend direction.
Bearish Phase : The bearish phase signifies a strong downward trend in prices with lower lows and lower highs. It is a period of pessimism and negative sentiment in the market.
These rules of the six phases outline the cyclical nature of market trends and provide traders with a framework for understanding and analyzing price behavior to make informed trading decisions based on the current market phase.
60-period channel
The 60-period channel should be applied differently in each phase of the market cycle.
Recovery Phase : In this phase, the 60-period channel can help identify the beginning of a potential uptrend as price stabilizes or improves. Traders can look for new highs frequently in the 60-period channel to confirm the trend initiation or continuation.
Accumulation Phase : During the accumulation phase, the 60-period channel can highlight that the current price is sufficiently strong to be above recent price and longer-term price. Traders may observe new highs frequently in the 60-period channel as the slope of the 50-period moving average (SMA) trends upwards while the 200-period moving average (SMA) slope is losing its downward slope.
Bullish Phase : In the bullish phase, the 60-period channel showing a series of higher highs is crucial for confirming the uptrend. Additionally, traders should observe an upward-sloping 50-period SMA above an upward-sloping 200-period SMA for further validation of the bullish phase.
Warning Phase : When in the warning phase, the 60-period channel can provide insights into whether the current price is weaker than recent prices. Traders should pay attention to the relationship between the price close, the 50-period SMA, and the 200-period SMA to gauge the strength of the phase.
Distribution Phase : In the distribution phase, traders should look for new lows frequently in the 60-period channel, hinting at a weakening trend. It is crucial to observe that the 50-period SMA is still above the 200-period SMA in this phase.
Bearish Phase : Lastly, in the bearish phase, the 60-period channel reflecting a series of lower lows confirms the downtrend. Traders should also note that the price close is below both the 50-period SMA and the 200-period SMA, with the relationship of the 50-period SMA being less than the 200-period SMA.
By carefully analyzing the 60-period channel in each phase, traders can better understand market trends and make informed decisions regarding their investments.
DNSE VN301!, SMA & EMA Cross StrategyDiscover the tailored Pinescript to trade VN30F1M Future Contracts intraday, the strategy focuses on SMA & EMA crosses to identify potential entry/exit points. The script closes all positions by 14:25 to avoid holding any contracts overnight.
HNX:VN301!
www.tradingview.com
Setting & Backtest result:
1-minute chart, initial capital of VND 100 million, entering 4 contracts per time, backtest result from Jan-2024 to Nov-2024 yielded a return over 40%, executed over 1,000 trades (average of 4 trades/day), winning trades rate ~ 30% with a profit factor of 1.10.
The default setting of the script:
A decent optimization is reached when SMA and EMA periods are set to 60 and 15 respectively while the Long/Short stop-loss level is set to 20 ticks (2 points) from the entry price.
Entry & Exit conditions:
Long signals are generated when ema(15) crosses over sma(60) while Short signals happen when ema(15) crosses under sma(60). Long orders are closed when ema(15) crosses under sma(60) while Short orders are closed when ema(15) crosses over sma(60).
Exit conditions happen when (whichever came first):
Another Long/Short signal is generated
The Stop-loss level is reached
The Cut-off time is reached (14:25 every day)
*Disclaimers:
Futures Contracts Trading are subjected to a high degree of risk and price movements can fluctuate significantly. This script functions as a reference source and should be used after users have clearly understood how futures trading works, accessed their risk tolerance level, and are knowledgeable of the functioning logic behind the script.
Users are solely responsible for their investment decisions, and DNSE is not responsible for any potential losses from applying such a strategy to real-life trading activities. Past performance is not indicative/guarantee of future results, kindly reach out to us should you have specific questions about this script.
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Khám phá Pinescript được thiết kế riêng để giao dịch Hợp đồng tương lai VN30F1M trong ngày, chiến lược tập trung vào các đường SMA & EMA cắt nhau để xác định các điểm vào/ra tiềm năng. Chiến lược sẽ đóng tất cả các vị thế trước 14:25 để tránh giữ bất kỳ hợp đồng nào qua đêm.
Thiết lập & Kết quả backtest:
Chart 1 phút, vốn ban đầu là 100 triệu đồng, vào 4 hợp đồng mỗi lần, kết quả backtest từ tháng 1/2024 tới tháng 11/2024 mang lại lợi nhuận trên 40%, thực hiện hơn 1.000 giao dịch (trung bình 4 giao dịch/ngày), tỷ lệ giao dịch thắng ~ 30% với hệ số lợi nhuận là 1,10.
Thiết lập mặc định của chiến lược:
Đạt được một mức tối ưu ổn khi SMA và EMA periods được đặt lần lượt là 60 và 15 trong khi mức cắt lỗ được đặt thành 20 tick (2 điểm) từ giá vào.
Điều kiện Mở và Đóng vị thế:
Tín hiệu Long được tạo ra khi ema(15) cắt trên sma(60) trong khi tín hiệu Short xảy ra khi ema(15) cắt dưới sma(60). Lệnh Long được đóng khi ema(15) cắt dưới sma(60) trong khi lệnh Short được đóng khi ema(15) cắt lên sma(60).
Điều kiện đóng vị thể xảy ra khi (tùy điều kiện nào đến trước):
Một tín hiệu Long/Short khác được tạo ra
Giá chạm mức cắt lỗ
Lệnh chưa đóng nhưng tới giờ cut-off (14:25 hàng ngày)
*Tuyên bố miễn trừ trách nhiệm:
Giao dịch hợp đồng tương lai có mức rủi ro cao và giá có thể dao động đáng kể. Chiến lược này hoạt động như một nguồn tham khảo và nên được sử dụng sau khi người dùng đã hiểu rõ cách thức giao dịch hợp đồng tương lai, đã đánh giá mức độ chấp nhận rủi ro của bản thân và hiểu rõ về logic vận hành của chiến lược này.
Người dùng hoàn toàn chịu trách nhiệm về các quyết định đầu tư của mình và DNSE không chịu trách nhiệm về bất kỳ khoản lỗ tiềm ẩn nào khi áp dụng chiến lược này vào các hoạt động giao dịch thực tế. Hiệu suất trong quá khứ không chỉ ra/cam kết kết quả trong tương lai, vui lòng liên hệ với chúng tôi nếu bạn có thắc mắc cụ thể về chiến lược giao dịch này.
ADX mura visionOverview
The Enhanced ADX with Custom 40/60 Levels is a Pine Script™ v6 open-source indicator that builds on the classic Average Directional Index by adding two critical thresholds at 40 and 60. These extra levels give you early warning of trend exhaustion and precise exit signals when paired with the mura indicator.
Key Features & Originality
Custom Thresholds (40/60): Beyond the standard ADX levels (25/50), levels at 40 and 60 mark advanced trend strength phases and highlight when momentum is beginning to fade.
Trend Weakness Alerts: Configurable alerts trigger when ADX dips below 60 or 40, signaling ideal exit opportunities before a full reversal.
Color-Coded ADX Line: The ADX line dynamically changes color upon crossing 40 and 60, making trend strength transitions instantly visible.
mura Indicator Synergy: Specially designed to complement the mura indicator—when mura signals an exit and ADX falls below your chosen threshold, you get a high-confidence cue to close your position.
How It Works
Advanced Trend Phases: ADX above 25 confirms a trend, above 40 indicates strong momentum, and above 60 signals extreme strength. A drop below 60 or 40 warns of weakening momentum.
Exit Confirmation: Combine a mura exit signal (e.g., dot flip or reversal) with an ADX cross below 40/60 to capture optimal exit points.
Usage & Inputs
ADX Length (default 14): Period for ADX calculation.
Level Inputs: Customize your threshold levels (default: 25, 40, 50, 60).
Alert Toggles: Enable alerts on crosses above or below each level.
Style Settings: Adjust line colors and widths for ADX and threshold lines.
Why This Adds Value
Early Exit Signals: Identify momentum loss before major reversals, protecting profits.
Cleaner Trade Management: Visual cues reduce guesswork when exiting trades.
Modular Design: Use standalone or integrate with mura for robust entry/exit workflows.
Pine Script™ Version: v6
Open-Source License: MPL-2.0
RSI and Bollinger Bands Screener [deepakks444]Indicator Overview
The indicator is designed to help traders identify potential long signals by combining the Relative Strength Index (RSI) and Bollinger Bands across multiple timeframes. This combination allows traders to leverage the strengths of both indicators to make more informed trading decisions.
Understanding RSI
What is RSI?
The Relative Strength Index (RSI) is a momentum oscillator that measures the speed and change of price movements. Developed by J. Welles Wilder Jr. for stocks and forex trading, the RSI is primarily used to identify overbought or oversold conditions in an asset.
How RSI Works:
Calculation: The RSI is calculated using the average gains and losses over a specified period, typically 14 periods.
Range: The RSI oscillates between 0 and 100.
Interpretation:
Key Features of RSI:
Momentum Indicator: RSI helps identify the momentum of price movements.
Divergences: RSI can show divergences, where the price makes a higher high, but the RSI makes a lower high, indicating potential reversals.
Trend Identification: RSI can also help identify trends. In an uptrend, the RSI tends to stay above 50, and in a downtrend, it tends to stay below 50.
Understanding Bollinger Bands
What is Bollinger Bands?
Bollinger Bands are a type of trading band or envelope plotted two standard deviations (positively and negatively) away from a simple moving average (SMA) of a price. Developed by financial analyst John Bollinger, Bollinger Bands consist of three lines:
Upper Band: SMA + (Standard Deviation × Multiplier)
Middle Band (Basis): SMA
Lower Band: SMA - (Standard Deviation × Multiplier)
How Bollinger Bands Work:
Volatility Measure: Bollinger Bands measure the volatility of the market. When the bands are wide, it indicates high volatility, and when the bands are narrow, it indicates low volatility.
Price Movement: The price tends to revert to the mean (middle band) after touching the upper or lower bands.
Support and Resistance: The upper and lower bands can act as dynamic support and resistance levels.
Key Features of Bollinger Bands:
Volatility Indicator: Bollinger Bands help traders understand the volatility of the market.
Mean Reversion: Prices tend to revert to the mean (middle band) after touching the bands.
Squeeze: A Bollinger Band Squeeze occurs when the bands narrow significantly, indicating low volatility and a potential breakout.
Combining RSI and Bollinger Bands
Strategy Overview:
The strategy aims to identify potential long signals by combining RSI and Bollinger Bands across multiple timeframes. The key conditions are:
RSI Crossing Above 60: The RSI should cross above 60 on the 15-minute timeframe.
RSI Above 60 on Higher Timeframes: The RSI should already be above 60 on the hourly and daily timeframes.
Price Above 20MA or Walking on Upper Bollinger Band: The price should be above the 20-period moving average of the Bollinger Bands or walking on the upper Bollinger Band.
Strategy Details:
RSI Calculation:
Calculate the RSI for the 15-minute, 1-hour, and 1-day timeframes.
Check if the RSI crosses above 60 on the 15-minute timeframe.
Ensure the RSI is above 60 on the 1-hour and 1-day timeframes.
Bollinger Bands Calculation:
Calculate the Bollinger Bands using a 20-period moving average and 2 standard deviations.
Check if the price is above the 20-period moving average or walking on the upper Bollinger Band.
Entry and Exit Signals:
Long Signal: When all the above conditions are met, consider a long entry.
Exit: Exit the trade when the price crosses below the 20-period moving average or the stop-loss is hit.
Example Usage
Setup:
Add the indicator to your TradingView chart.
Configure the inputs as per your requirements.
Monitoring:
Look for the long signal on the chart.
Ensure that the RSI is above 60 on the 15-minute, 1-hour, and 1-day timeframes.
Check that the price is above the 20-period moving average or walking on the upper Bollinger Band.
Trading:
Enter a long position when the criteria are met.
Set a stop-loss below the low of the recent 15-minute candle or based on your risk management rules.
Monitor the trade and exit when the RSI returns below 60 on any of the timeframes or when the price crosses below the 20-period moving average.
House Rules Compliance
No Financial Advice: This strategy is for educational purposes only and should not be construed as financial advice.
Risk Management: Always use proper risk management techniques, including stop-loss orders and position sizing.
Past Performance: Past performance is not indicative of future results. Always conduct your own research and analysis.
TradingView Guidelines: Ensure that any shared scripts or strategies comply with TradingView's terms of service and community guidelines.
Conclusion
This strategy combines RSI and Bollinger Bands across multiple timeframes to identify potential long signals. By ensuring that the RSI is above 60 on higher timeframes and that the price is above the 20-period moving average or walking on the upper Bollinger Band, traders can make more informed decisions. Always remember to conduct thorough research and use proper risk management techniques.
ABS Companion Oscillator — Trend / Exhaustion / New Trend (v1.1)
# ABS Companion Oscillator — Trend / Exhaustion / New Trend (v1.1)
## What it is (quick take)
**ABS CO** is a unified **–100…+100 trend oscillator** that fuses:
* **Regime**: EMA stack (fast/slow/long) + **HTF slope** (e.g., 60-minute)
* **Momentum**: **TSI** vs its signal
* **Stretch**: session-anchored **VWAP Z-score** for exhaustion and “fresh-trend” sanity checks
It paints the oscillator with **lime** in upstate, **red** in downstate, **gray** in neutral, and tags:
* **NEW↑ / NEW↓** when a **new trend** likely starts (zero-line cross with acceptable stretch)
* **EXH↑ / EXH↓** when an **existing trend looks exhausted** (large |Z| + momentum rollback)
> Use it as a **direction filter and context layer**. Works great in front of an entry engine and behind an exit tool.
---
## How to use it (operational workflow)
1. **Read the state**
* **Uptrend** when the oscillator is **≥ upThresh** (default +55) → prefer **long-side** plays.
* **Downtrend** when the oscillator is **≤ dnThresh** (default −55) → prefer **short-side** plays.
* **Neutral** between thresholds → be selective or flat; expect chop.
2. **Act on events**
* **NEW↑ / NEW↓**: zero-line cross with acceptable |Z| (not already overstretched). Treat as **trend start** cues.
* **EXH↑ / EXH↓**: trend state with **high |Z|** and TSI rollback versus its signal. Treat as **trend fatigue**; avoid fresh go-with entries and tighten risk.
3. **Practical pairing**
* Use **up/down state** (or above/below **neutralBand**) as your go/no-go filter for entries.
* Prioritize entries **with** NEW↑/NEW↓ and **without** nearby EXH tags.
* Keep holding while the oscillator stays in state and no EXH appears; consider scaling out on EXH or on your exit tool.
---
## Visual semantics & alerts
* **ABS CO line** (–100…+100): lime in upstate, red in downstate, gray in neutral.
* **Horizontal guides**: `Up` threshold, `Down` threshold, `Zero`, and optional **neutral band** lines.
* **Background heat** (optional): shaded when EXH conditions trigger (lime/red tint with intensity scaled by |Z|).
* **Tags**: `NEW↑`, `NEW↓`, `EXH↑`, `EXH↓`.
**Alerts (stable):**
* **ABS CO — New Uptrend** (NEW↑)
* **ABS CO — New Downtrend** (NEW↓)
* **ABS CO — Exhausted Up** (EXH↑)
* **ABS CO — Exhausted Down** (EXH↓)
Set alerts to **“Once per bar close”** for clean signals.
---
## Non-repainting behavior
* HTF queries use **lookahead\_off**.
* With **Strict NR = true**, the HTF slope is taken from the **prior completed** HTF bar; events evaluate on confirmed bars → **safer, fewer, cleaner**.
* NEW/EXH tags finalize at bar close. Disabling strictness yields earlier but noisier responses.
---
## Every input explained (and how it changes behavior)
### A) Trend & HTF structure
* **EMA Fast / Slow / Long (`emaFastLen`, `emaSlowLen`, `emaLongLen`)**
Control the baseline regime. Larger = smoother, fewer flips; smaller = snappier, more flips.
* **HTF EMA Len (`htfLen`)** & **HTF timeframe (`htfTF`)**
HTF slope filter. Longer len or higher TF = steadier bias (fewer state changes); shorter/ lower = more sensitive.
* **Strict NR (`strictNR`)**
`true` uses the **previous** HTF bar for slope and evaluates on confirmed bars → cleaner, slower.
### B) Momentum (TSI)
* **TSI Long / Short / Signal (`tsiLong`, `tsiShort`, `tsiSig`)**
Standard TSI. Larger values = smoother momentum, fewer EXH triggers; smaller = snappier, more EXH sensitivity.
### C) Stretch (VWAP Z-score)
* **VWAP Z-score length (`zLen`)**
Window for Z over session-anchored VWAP distance. Larger = smoother |Z|; smaller = more reactive stretch detection.
* **Exhaustion |Z| (`zHot`)**
Minimum |Z| to flag **EXH**. Raise to demand **bigger** stretch (fewer EXH); lower to catch milder excess.
* **Max |Z| for NEW (`zNewMax`)**
NEW requires |Z| **≤ zNewMax** (avoid “new trend” when already stretched). Lower = stricter; higher = more NEW tags.
### D) States & thresholds
* **Uptrend threshold (`upThresh`)** / **Downtrend threshold (`dnThresh`)**
Where the oscillator flips into trend states. Widen (e.g., +60/−60) to reduce false states; narrow to get earlier signals.
* **Neutral band (`neutralBand`)**
Visual buffer around zero for “meh” momentum. Larger band = fewer go/no-go flips near zero.
### E) Visuals & tags
* **Show New / Show Exhausted (`showNew`, `showExh`)**
Toggle the tag labels.
* **Shade exhaustion heat (`plotHeat`)**
On = color background when EXH fires. Helpful for scanning.
### F) Smoothing
* **Osc smoothing (`smoothLen`)**
EMA over the raw composite. Higher = steadier line (fewer whip flips); lower = faster turns.
---
## Tuning recipes
* **Trend-day bias (follow moves longer)**
* Raise **`upThresh`** to \~60 and **`dnThresh`** to \~−60
* Keep **`zNewMax`** low (1.0–1.2) to avoid “fresh trend” when stretched
* **`smoothLen`** 3–5 to reduce noise
* **Range-day bias (fade edges)**
* Keep thresholds closer (e.g., +50/−50) for quicker state changes
* Lower **`zHot`** slightly (1.6–1.7) to catch earlier exhaustion
* Consider slightly shorter TSI (e.g., 21/9/5) for faster EXH response
* **Scalping LTF (1–3m)**
* TSI 21/9/5, **`smoothLen`** 1–2
* Thresholds +/-50; **`zNewMax`** 1.0–1.2; **`zHot`** 1.6–1.8
* StrictNR **off** if you want earlier calls (accept more noise)
* **Swing / HTF (1h–D)**
* TSI 35/21/9, **`smoothLen`** 4–7
* Thresholds +/-60\~65; **`zNewMax`** 1.2; **`zHot`** 1.8–2.0
* StrictNR **on** for cleaner bias
---
## Playbooks (how to actually trade it)
* **Go/No-Go Filter**
* Only take **long entries** when the oscillator is **above the neutral band** (preferably ≥ `upThresh`).
* Only take **short entries** when **below** the neutral band (preferably ≤ `dnThresh`).
* Avoid fresh go-with entries if an **EXH** tag appears; let the next setup re-arm.
* **Trend Genesis**
* Treat **NEW↑ / NEW↓** as “green light” for **first pullback** entries in the new direction (ideally within acceptable |Z|).
* **Trend Maturity**
* When in a position and **EXH** prints **against** you, tighten stops, take partials, or lean on your exit tool to protect gains.
---
## Suggested starting points
* **Day trading (5–15m):**
* TSI 25/13/7, `smoothLen=3`, thresholds **+55 / −55**, `zNewMax = 1.2`, `zHot = 1.8`, **StrictNR = true**
* **Scalping (1–3m):**
* TSI 21/9/5, `smoothLen=1–2`, thresholds **+50 / −50**, `zNewMax = 1.1–1.2`, `zHot = 1.6–1.8`, **StrictNR = false** (optional)
* **Swing (1h–D):**
* TSI 35/21/9, `smoothLen=4–6`, thresholds **+60 / −60**, `zNewMax = 1.2`, `zHot = 1.9–2.0`, **StrictNR = true**
---
## Notes & best practices
* **Session anchoring**: Z-score is session-anchored (resets by trading date). If you trade outside standard sessions, verify your data session.
* **Instrument specificity**: Tune **`zHot`**, **`zNewMax`**, and thresholds per symbol and timeframe.
* **Bar-close discipline**: Evaluate tags at **bar close** to avoid intrabar flip-flop.
* This is a **context/confirmation tool**, not a broker or strategy. Combine with your entry/exit rules and position sizing.
---
**Tip:** Start with the suggested day-trading profile. Use this oscillator as your **gate** (only trade with it), let your entry engine time executions, and rely on your exit tool for standardized profit-taking.
CSVParser█ OVERVIEW
The library contains functions for parsing and importing complex CSV configurations (with a special simple syntax) into a special hierarchical object (of type objProps ) as follows:
Functions:
parseConfig() - reads CSV text into an objProps object.
toT() - displays the contents of an objProps object in a table form, which allows to check the CSV text for syntax errors.
getPropAr() - returns objProps.arS array for child object with `prop` key in mpObj map (or na if not found)
This library is handy in allowing users to store presets for the scripts and switch between them (see, e.g., my HTF moving averages script where users can switch between several preset configuations of 24 MA's across 5 timeframes).
█ HOW THE SCRIPT WORKS.
The script works as follows:
all values read from config text are stored as strings
Nested brackets in config text create a named nested objects of objProps0, ... , objProps9 types.
objProps objects of each level have the following fields:
- array arS for storing values without names (e.g. "12, 23" will be imported into a string array arS as )
- map mpS for storing items with names (e.g. "tf = 60, length = 21" will be imported as <"tf", "60"> and <"length", "21"> pairs into mpS )
- map mpObj for storing nested objects (e.g. "TF1(tf=60, length(21,50,100))" creates a <"TF1, objProps0 object> pair in mpObj map property of the top level object (objProps) , "tf=60" is stored as <"tf", "60"> key-value pair in mpS map property of a next level object (objProps0) and "length (...)" creates a <"length", objProps1> pair in objProps0.mpObj map while length values are stored in objProps1.arS array as strings. Every opening bracket creates a next level objProps object.
If objects or properties with duplicate names are encountered only the latest is imported
(e.g. for "TF1(length(12,22)), TF1(tf=240)" only "TF1(tf=240)" will be imported
Line breaks are not regarded as part of syntax (i.e. values are imported with line breaks, you can supply
symbols "(" , ")" , "," and "=" are special characters and cannot be used within property values (with the exception of a quoted text as a value of a property as explained below)
named properties can have quoted text as their value. In that case special characters within quotation marks are regarded as normal characters. Text between "=" and opening quotation mark as well as text following the closing quotation mark and until next property value is ignored. E.g. "quote = ignored "The quote" also ignored" will be imported as <"quote", "The quote">. Quotation marks within quotes must be excaped with "\" .
if a key names happens to be a multi-line then only first line containing non-space characters (trimmed from spaces) is taken as a key.
")," or ") ," and similar do not create an empty ("") array item while ",," does. (",)" creates an "" array item)
█ CSV CONFIGURATION SYNTAX
Unnamed values: just list them comma separated and they will be imported into arS of the object of the current level.
Named values: use "=" sign as follows: "property1=value1, property2 = value2"
Value of several objects: Use brackets after the name of the object ant list all object properties within the brackets (including its child objects if necessary). E.g. "TF1(tf =60, length(21,200), TF2(tf=240, length(50,200)"
Named and unnamed values as well as objects can go in any order. E.g. "12, tf=60, 21" will be imported as follows: "12", "21" will go to arS array and <"tf", "60"> will go to mpS maP of objProps (the top level object).
You can play around and test your config text using demo in this library, just edit your text in script settings and see how it is parsed into objProps objects.
█ USAGE RECOMMENDATIONS AND SAMPLE USE
I suggest the following approach:
- create functions for your UDT which can set properties by name.
- create enumerator functions which iterates through all the property names (supplied as a const string array) and imports their values into the object
█ SAMPLE USE
A sample use of this library can be seen in my Multi-timeframe 24 moving averages + BB+SAR+Supertrend+VWAP script where settings for the MAs across many timeframes are imported from CSV configurations (presets).
█ FULL LIST OF FUNCTIONS AND PROPERTIES
nzs(_s, nz)
Like nz() but for strings. Returns `nz` arg (default = "") if _s is na.
Parameters:
_s (string)
nz (string)
method init(this)
Initializes objProps obj (creates child maps and arrays)
Namespace types: objProps
Parameters:
this (objProps)
method toT(this, nz)
Outputs objProps to string matrices for further display using autotable().
Namespace types: objProps, objProps1, ..., objProps9
Parameters:
this (objProps/objProps1/..../objProps9)
nz (string)
Returns: A tuple - value, merge and color matrix (autotable() parameters)
method parseConfig(this, s)
Reads config text into objProps (unnamed values into arS, named into mpS, sub-levels into mpObj)
Namespace types: objProps
Parameters:
this (objProps)
s (string)
method getPropArS(this, prop)
Returns a string array of values for a given property name `prop`. Looks for a key `prop` in objProps.mpObj
if finds pair returns obj.arS, otherwise returns na. Returns a reference to the original, not a copy.
Namespace types: objProps, objProps1, ..., objProps8
Parameters:
this (objProps/objProps1/..../objProps8)
prop (string)
method getPropVal(this, prop, id)
Checks if there is an array of values for property `prop` and returns its `id`'s element or na if not found
Namespace types: objProps, objProps1, ..., objProps8
Parameters:
this (objProps/objProps1/..../objProps8) : objProps object containing array of property values in a child objProp object corresponding to propertty name.
prop (string) : (string) Name of the property
id (int) : (int) Id of the element to be returned from the array pf property values
objProps9 type
Object for storing values read from CSV relating to a particular object or property name.
Fields:
mpS (map) : (map() Stores property values as pairs
arS (array) : (string ) Array of values
objProps, objProps0, ... objProps8 types
Object for storing values read from CSV relating to a particular object or property name.
Fields:
mpS (map) : (map() Stores property values as pairs
arS (array) : (string ) Array of values
mpObj (map) : (map() Stores objProps objects containing properties's data as pairs
Highest Volume* 지표 설명
이 지표는 다양한 기간 동안의 최대 거래량을 시각적으로 표시하여 거래자들이 중요한 거래량 패턴을 쉽게 식별할 수 있도록 도와줍니다. 30, 60, 90, 120 캔들 기간 동안의 최대 거래량을 감지하고, 이를 차트 상에 색상 코드로 표시합니다.
다중 기간 분석: 30, 60, 90, 120 캔들 기간에 대한 최대 거래량을 동시에 추적합니다.
기간에 따른 색상 표시: 기간이 길어질수록 표시되는 색상이 짙어집니다.
* 주요 기능
거래량 급증 감지: 갑작스러운 거래량 증가를 빠르게 포착할 수 있습니다.
* 부가 설명
초록색 배경: 최근 120 캔들 중 최대 거래량
노란색 배경: 최근 90 캔들 중 최대 거래량 (120 캔들 최대가 아닌 경우)
주황색 배경: 최근 60 캔들 중 최대 거래량 (90, 120 캔들 최대가 아닌 경우)
빨간색 배경: 최근 30 캔들 중 최대 거래량 (60, 90, 120 캔들 최대가 아닌 경우)
* Indicator Description
This indicator visually displays the maximum trading volume over various periods, helping traders easily identify important volume patterns. It detects the highest volume over 30, 60, 90, and 120 candle periods and represents this on the chart using color codes.
Multi-period analysis: Simultaneously tracks the maximum volume for 30, 60, 90, and 120 candle periods.
Color display according to period: The color becomes darker as the period gets longer.
* Key Features
Rapid volume surge detection: Quickly captures sudden increases in trading volume.
* Additional Explanation
Green background: Highest volume among the most recent 120 candles
Yellow background: Highest volume among the most recent 90 candles (when not the highest in 120 candles)
Orange background: Highest volume among the most recent 60 candles (when not the highest in 90 or 120 candles)
Red background: Highest volume among the most recent 30 candles (when not the highest in 60, 90, or 120 candles)
Scalping The Bull IndicatorName: Scalping The Bull Indicator
Category: Scalping, Trend Following, Mean Reversion.
Timeframe: 1M, 5M, 30M, 1D depending on the specific technique.
Technical Analysis: The indicator supports the operations of the trader named "Scalping The Bull" which uses price action and exponential moving averages.
Suggested usage: Altcoin showing strong trends for scalping and intra-day trades. Trigger points are used as entry and exit points and to be used to understand when a signal has more power.
It is possible to identify the following conformations:
Shimano: look at the price records of a consecutive series of closings between the EMA 60 and the EMA 223 when a certain threshold is reached. Use the trigger points as price structures to identify entry and exit zones (e.g. breakout of the yesterday high as for entry point) .
Bomb: look at the price registers a percentage variation in a single candle, greater than a threshold such as 2%, in particular on shorter timeframes and around the trigger points.
Viagra: look at there is a consecutive series of closes below the EMA 10.
Downward fake: look when, after a cross under (Death Cross), the price returns above the EMA 223 using the yesterday high as a trigger point.
Emergence: look at the EMA 60 is about to cross over the EMA 223.
Anti-crossing: look at, after an important price rise and a subsequent retracement, the EMA 60 is about to cross under the EMA 223 but a bullish impulse brings the price back above the EMAs.
For Sales: look at two types of situations: 1) when the price falls by more than 10% from the opening price and around the yesterday’s low or 2) when the price falls and then reaches, in the last 5 days, a bigger percentage and then breaks a trigger point.
Colour change: look at the opening price of the session - indicated as a trigger point.
Third touch of EMA 60: look for 3 touches below the EMA 60, and enter when there is a close above the EMA 60.
Third touch of EMA 223: look for 3 touches when there are 3 touches below the EMA 223, and enter when there is a close above the EMA 60.
Bud: look at price when it crosses upwards the average 10 and subsequently at least 2 "rest" candles are between the maximum and minimum of the breaking candle.
Fake on EMA 10: look for the open of a candle higher than the EMA 10, the minimum of the candle lower and the closing price returns above the EMA 10..
For Stop Loss and Profit Targets consider a proper R/R depending on Risk Management, using price structures such as the low of the entering candle and a quick Position Management moving quickly the Stop-Loss at Break-Even.
Configuration:
Market
EMA: The indicator automatically configure itself on market it knows (Binance, Piazza Affari and NASDAQ) otherwise it can be configured manually fo Crypto market (5/10/60/223) or Stock Market (5/10/50/200).
Additional Average: You can display an additional average, e.g. 20-period average.
Chart elements:
Session Separators: indicates the beginning of the current session (in blue)
Background: signals with the background in green an uptrend situation ( 60 > 223) and in red background a downtrend situation (60 < 223).
Trigger points:
Today's highs and lows: draw on the chart the opening price of the daily candle and the highs and lows of the day (high in purple, low in red and open in green)
Yesterday's highs and lows: draw on the chart the opening price of the daily candle, the highs and lows of the previous day (high in yellow, low in red).
Credits
Massimo : for refactoring and suggestions.
WaveTrend With Divs & RSI(STOCH) Divs by WeloTradesWaveTrend with Divergences & RSI(STOCH) Divergences by WeloTrades
Overview
The "WaveTrend With Divergences & RSI(STOCH) Divergences" is an advanced Pine Script™ indicator designed for TradingView, offering a multi-dimensional analysis of market conditions. This script integrates several technical indicators—WaveTrend, Money Flow Index (MFI), RSI, and Stochastic RSI—into a cohesive tool that identifies both regular and hidden divergences across these indicators. These divergences can indicate potential market reversals and provide critical trading opportunities.
This indicator is not just a simple combination of popular tools; it offers extensive customization options, organized data presentation, and valuable trading signals that are easy to interpret. Whether you're a day trader or a long-term investor, this script enhances your ability to make informed decisions.
Originality and Usefulness
The originality of this script lies in its integration and the synergy it creates among the indicators used. Rather than merely combining multiple indicators, this script allows them to work together, enhancing each other's strengths. For example, by identifying divergences across WaveTrend, RSI, and Stochastic RSI simultaneously, the script provides multiple layers of confirmation, which reduces the likelihood of false signals and increases the reliability of trading signals.
The usefulness of this script is apparent in its ability to offer a consolidated view of market dynamics. It not only simplifies the analytical process by combining different indicators but also provides deeper insights through its divergence detection features. This comprehensive approach is designed to help traders identify potential market reversals, confirm trends, and ultimately make more informed trading decisions.
How the Components Work Together
1. Cross-Validation of Signals
WaveTrend: This indicator is primarily used to identify overbought and oversold conditions, as well as potential buy and sell signals. WaveTrend's ability to smooth price data and reduce noise makes it a reliable tool for identifying trend reversals.
RSI & Stochastic RSI: These momentum oscillators are used to measure the speed and change of price movements. While RSI identifies general overbought and oversold conditions, Stochastic RSI offers a more granular view by tracking the RSI’s level relative to its high-low range over a period of time. When these indicators align with WaveTrend signals, it adds a layer of confirmation that enhances the reliability of the signals.
Money Flow Index (MFI): This volume-weighted indicator assesses the inflow and outflow of money in an asset, giving insights into buying and selling pressure. By analyzing the MFI alongside WaveTrend and RSI indicators, the script can cross-validate signals, ensuring that buy or sell signals are supported by actual market volume.
Example Bullish scenario:
When a bullish divergence is detected on the RSI and confirmed by a corresponding bullish signal on the WaveTrend, along with an increasing Money Flow Index, the probability of a successful trade setup increases. This cross-validation minimizes the risk of acting on false signals, which might occur when relying on a single indicator.
Example Bearish scenario:
When a bearish divergence is detected on the RSI and confirmed by a corresponding bearish signal on the WaveTrend, along with an decreasing Money Flow Index, the probability of a successful trade setup increases. This cross-validation minimizes the risk of acting on false signals, which might occur when relying on a single indicator.
2. Divergence Detection and Market Reversals
Regular Divergences: Occur when the price action and an indicator (like RSI or WaveTrend) move in opposite directions. Regular bullish divergence signals a potential upward reversal when the price makes a lower low while the indicator makes a higher low. Conversely, regular bearish divergence suggests a downward reversal when the price makes a higher high, but the indicator makes a lower high.
Hidden Divergences: These occur when the price action and indicator move in the same direction, but with different momentum. Hidden bullish divergence suggests the continuation of an uptrend, while hidden bearish divergence suggests the continuation of a downtrend. By detecting these divergences across multiple indicators, the script identifies potential trend reversals or continuations with greater accuracy.
Example: The script might detect a regular bullish divergence on the WaveTrend while simultaneously identifying a hidden bullish divergence on the RSI. This combination suggests that while a trend reversal is possible, the overall market sentiment remains bullish, providing a nuanced view of the market.
A Regular Bullish Divergence Example:
A Hidden Bullish Divergence Example:
A Regular Bearish Divergence Example:
A Hidden Bearish Divergence Example:
3. Trend Strength and Sentiment Analysis
WaveTrend: Measures the strength and direction of the trend. By identifying the extremes of market sentiment (overbought and oversold levels), WaveTrend provides early signals for potential reversals.
Money Flow Index (MFI): Assesses the underlying sentiment by analyzing the flow of money. A rising MFI during an uptrend confirms strong buying pressure, while a falling MFI during a downtrend confirms selling pressure. This helps traders assess whether a trend is likely to continue or reverse.
RSI & Stochastic RSI: Offer a momentum-based perspective on the trend’s strength. High RSI or Stochastic RSI values indicate that the asset may be overbought, suggesting a potential reversal. Conversely, low values indicate oversold conditions, signaling a possible upward reversal.
Example:
During a strong uptrend, the WaveTrend & RSI's might signal overbought conditions, suggesting caution. If the MFI also shows decreasing buying pressure and the RSI reaches extreme levels, these indicators together suggest that the trend might be weakening, and a reversal could be imminent.
Example:
During a strong downtrend, the WaveTrend & RSI's might signal oversold conditions, suggesting caution. If the MFI also shows increasing buying pressure and the RSI reaches extreme levels, these indicators together suggest that the trend might be weakening, and a reversal could be imminent.
Conclusion
The "WaveTrend With Divergences & RSI(STOCH) Divergences" script offers a powerful, integrated approach to technical analysis by combining trend, momentum, and sentiment indicators into a single tool. Its unique value lies in the cross-validation of signals, the ability to detect divergences, and the comprehensive view it provides of market conditions. By offering traders multiple layers of analysis and customization options, this script is designed to enhance trading decisions, reduce false signals, and provide clearer insights into market dynamics.
WAVETREND
Display of WaveTrend:
Display of WaveTrend Setting:
WaveTrend Indicator Explanation
The WaveTrend indicator helps identify overbought and oversold conditions, as well as potential buy and sell signals. Its flexibility allows traders to adapt it to various strategies, making it a versatile tool in technical analysis.
WaveTrend Input Settings:
WT MA Source: Default: HLC3
What it is: The data source used for calculating the WaveTrend Moving Average.
What it does: Determines the input data to smooth price action and filter noise.
Example: Using HLC3 (average of High, Low, Close) provides a smoother data representation compared to using just the closing price.
Length (WT MA Length): Default: 3
What it is: The period used to calculate the Moving Average.
What it does: Adjusts the sensitivity of the WaveTrend indicator, where shorter lengths respond more quickly to price changes.
Example: A length of 3 is ideal for short-term analysis, providing quick reactions to price movements.
WT Channel Length & Average: Default: WT Channel Length = 9, Average = 12
What it is: Lengths used to calculate the WaveTrend channel and its average.
What it does: Smooths out the WaveTrend further, reducing false signals by averaging over a set period.
Example: Higher values reduce noise and help in identifying more reliable trends.
Channel: Style, Width, and Color:
What it is: Customization options for the WaveTrend channel's appearance.
What it does: Adjusts how the channel is displayed, including line style, width, and color.
Example: Choosing an area style with a distinct color can make the WaveTrend indicator clearly visible on the chart.
WT Buy & Sell Signals:
What it is: Settings to enable and customize buy and sell signals based on WaveTrend.
What it does: Allows for the display of buy/sell signals and customization of their shapes and colors.
When it gives a Buy Signal: Generated when the WaveTrend line crosses below an oversold level and then rises back, indicating a potential upward price movement.
When it gives a Sell Signal: Triggered when the WaveTrend line crosses above an overbought level and then declines, suggesting a possible downward trend.
Example: The script identifies these signals based on mean reversion principles, where prices tend to revert to the mean after reaching extremes. Traders can use these signals to time their entries and exits effectively.
WAVETREND OVERBOUGTH AND OVERSOLD LEVELS
Display of WaveTrend with Overbought & Oversold Levels:
Display of WaveTrend Overbought & Oversold Levels Settings:
WaveTrend Overbought & Oversold Levels Explanation
WT OB & OS Levels: Default: OB Level 1 = 53, OB Level 2 = 60, OS Level 1 = -53, OS Level 2 = -60
What it is: The default overbought and oversold levels used by the WaveTrend indicator to signal potential market reversals.
What it does: When the WaveTrend crosses above the OB levels, it indicates an overbought condition, potentially signaling a reversal or selling opportunity. Conversely, when it crosses below the OS levels, it indicates an oversold condition, potentially signaling a reversal or buying opportunity.
Example: A trader might use these levels to time entry or exit points, such as selling when the WaveTrend crosses into the overbought zone or buying when it crosses into the oversold zone.
Show OB/OS Levels: Default: True
What it is: Toggle options to show or hide the overbought and oversold levels on your chart.
What it does: When enabled, these levels will be visually represented on your chart, helping you to easily identify when the market reaches these critical thresholds.
Example: Displaying these levels can help you quickly see when the WaveTrend is approaching or has crossed into overbought or oversold territory, allowing for more informed trading decisions.
Line Style, Width, and Color for OB/OS Levels:
What it is: Options to customize the appearance of the OB and OS levels on your chart, including line style (solid, dotted, dashed), line width, and color.
What it does: These settings allow you to adjust how prominently these levels are displayed on your chart, which can help you better visualize and respond to overbought or oversold conditions.
Example: Setting a thicker, dashed line in a contrasting color can make these levels stand out more clearly, aiding in quick visual identification.
Example of Use:
Scenario: A trader wants to identify potential selling points when the market is overbought. They set the OB levels at 53 and 60, choosing a solid, red line style to make these levels clear on their chart. As the WaveTrend crosses above 53, they monitor for further price action, and upon crossing 60, they consider initiating a sell order.
WAVETREND DIVERGENCES
Display of WaveTrend Divergence:
Display of WaveTrend Divergence Setting:
WaveTrend Divergence Indicator Explanation
The WaveTrend Divergence feature helps identify potential reversal points in the market by highlighting divergences between the price and the WaveTrend indicator. Divergences can signal a shift in market momentum, indicating a possible trend reversal. This component allows traders to visualize and customize divergence detection on their charts.
WaveTrend Divergence Input Settings:
Potential Reversal Range: Default: 28
What it is: The number of bars to look back when detecting potential tops and bottoms.
What it does: Sets the range for identifying possible reversal points based on historical data.
Example: A setting of 28 looks back across the last 28 bars to find reversal points, offering a balance between responsiveness and reliability.
Reversal Minimum LVL OB & OS: Default: OB = 35, OS = -35
What it is: The minimum overbought and oversold levels required for detecting potential reversals.
What it does: Adjusts the thresholds that trigger a reversal signal based on the WaveTrend indicator.
Example: A higher OB level reduces the sensitivity to overbought conditions, potentially filtering out false reversal signals.
Lookback Bar Left & Right: Default: Left = 10, Right = 1
What it is: The number of bars to the left and right used to confirm a top or bottom.
What it does: Helps determine the position of peaks and troughs in the price action.
Example: A larger left lookback captures more extended price action before the peak, while a smaller right lookback focuses on the immediate past.
Lookback Range Min & Max: Default: Min = 5, Max = 60
What it is: The minimum and maximum range for the lookback period when identifying divergences.
What it does: Fine-tunes the detection of divergences by controlling the range over which the indicator looks back.
Example: A wider range increases the chances of detecting divergences across different market conditions.
R.Div Minimum LVL OB & OS: Default: OB = 53, OS = -53
What it is: The threshold levels for detecting regular divergences.
What it does: Adjusts the sensitivity of the regular divergence detection.
Example: Higher thresholds make the detection more conservative, identifying only stronger divergence signals.
H.Div Minimum LVL OB & OS: Default: OB = 20, OS = -20
What it is: The threshold levels for detecting hidden divergences.
What it does: Similar to regular divergence settings but for hidden divergences, which can indicate potential reversals that are less obvious.
Example: Lower thresholds make the hidden divergence detection more sensitive, capturing subtler market shifts.
Divergence Label Options:
What it is: Options to display and customize labels for regular and hidden divergences.
What it does: Allows users to visually differentiate between regular and hidden divergences using customizable labels and colors.
Example: Using different colors and symbols for regular (R) and hidden (H) divergences makes it easier to interpret signals on the chart.
Text Size and Color:
What it is: Customization options for the size and color of divergence labels.
What it does: Adjusts the readability and visibility of divergence labels on the chart.
Example: Larger text size may be preferred for charts with a lot of data, ensuring divergence labels stand out clearly.
FAST & SLOW MONEY FLOW INDEX
Display of Fast & Slow Money Flow:
Display of Fast & Slow Money Flow Setting:
Fast Money Flow Indicator Explanation
The Fast Money Flow indicator helps traders identify the flow of money into and out of an asset over a shorter time frame. By tracking the volume-weighted average of price movements, it provides insights into buying and selling pressure in the market, which can be crucial for making timely trading decisions.
Fast Money Flow Input Settings:
Fast Money Flow: Length: Default: 9
What it is: The period used for calculating the Fast Money Flow.
What it does: Determines the sensitivity of the Money Flow calculation. A shorter length makes the indicator more responsive to recent price changes, while a longer length provides a smoother signal.
Example: A length of 9 is suitable for traders looking to capture quick shifts in market sentiment over a short period.
Fast MFI Area Multiplier: Default: 5
What it is: A multiplier applied to the Money Flow area calculation.
What it does: Adjusts the size of the Money Flow area on the chart, effectively amplifying or reducing the visual impact of the indicator.
Example: A higher multiplier can make the Money Flow more prominent on the chart, aiding in the quick identification of significant money flow changes.
Y Position (Y Pos): Default: 0
What it is: The vertical position adjustment for the Fast Money Flow plot on the chart.
What it does: Allows you to move the Money Flow plot up or down on the chart to avoid overlap with other indicators.
Example: Adjusting the Y Position can be useful if you have multiple indicators on the chart and need to maintain clarity.
Fast MFI Style, Width, and Color:
What it is: Customization options for how the Fast Money Flow is displayed on the chart.
What it does: Enables you to choose between different plot styles (line or area), set the line width, and select colors for positive and negative money flow.
Example: Using different colors for positive (green) and negative (red) money flow helps to visually distinguish between periods of buying and selling pressure.
Slow Money Flow Indicator Explanation
The Slow Money Flow indicator tracks the flow of money into and out of an asset over a longer time frame. It provides a broader perspective on market sentiment, smoothing out short-term fluctuations and highlighting longer-term trends.
Slow Money Flow Input Settings:
Slow Money Flow: Length: Default: 12
What it is: The period used for calculating the Slow Money Flow.
What it does: A longer period smooths out short-term fluctuations, providing a clearer view of the overall money flow trend.
Example: A length of 12 is often used by traders looking to identify sustained trends rather than short-term volatility.
Slow MFI Area Multiplier: Default: 5
What it is: A multiplier applied to the Slow Money Flow area calculation.
What it does: Adjusts the size of the Money Flow area on the chart, helping to emphasize the indicator’s significance.
Example: Increasing the multiplier can help highlight the Money Flow in markets with less volatile price action.
Y Position (Y Pos): Default: 0
What it is: The vertical position adjustment for the Slow Money Flow plot on the chart.
What it does: Allows for vertical repositioning of the Money Flow plot to maintain chart clarity when used with other indicators.
Example: Adjusting the Y Position ensures that the Slow Money Flow indicator does not overlap with other key indicators on the chart.
Slow MFI Style, Width, and Color:
What it is: Customization options for the visual display of the Slow Money Flow on the chart.
What it does: Allows you to choose the plot style (line or area), set the line width, and select colors to differentiate positive and negative money flow.
Example: Customizing the colors for the Slow Money Flow allows traders to quickly distinguish between buying and selling trends in the market.
RSI
Display of RSI:
Display of RSI Setting:
RSI Indicator Explanation
The Relative Strength Index (RSI) is a momentum oscillator that measures the speed and change of price movements. It is typically used to identify overbought or oversold conditions in the market, providing traders with potential signals for buying or selling.
RSI Input Settings:
RSI Source: Default: Close
What it is: The data source used for calculating the RSI.
What it does: Determines which price data (e.g., close, open) is used in the RSI calculation, affecting how the indicator reflects market conditions.
Example: Using the closing price is standard practice, as it reflects the final agreed-upon price for a given time period.
MA Type (Moving Average Type): Default: SMA
What it is: The type of moving average applied to the RSI for smoothing purposes.
What it does: Changes the smoothing technique of the RSI, impacting how quickly the indicator responds to price movements.
Example: Using an Exponential Moving Average (EMA) will make the RSI more sensitive to recent price changes compared to a Simple Moving Average (SMA).
RSI Length: Default: 14
What it is: The period over which the RSI is calculated.
What it does: Adjusts the sensitivity of the RSI. A shorter length (e.g., 7) makes the RSI more responsive to recent price changes, while a longer length (e.g., 21) smooths out the indicator, reducing the number of signals.
Example: A 14-period RSI is commonly used for identifying overbought and oversold conditions, providing a balance between sensitivity and reliability.
RSI Plot Style, Width, and Color:
What it is: Options to customize the appearance of the RSI line on the chart.
What it does: Allows you to adjust the visual representation of the RSI, including the line width and color.
Example: Setting a thicker line width and a bright color like yellow can make the RSI more visible on the chart, aiding in quick analysis.
Display of RSI with RSI Moving Average:
RSI Moving Average Explanation
The RSI Moving Average adds a smoothing layer to the RSI, helping to filter out noise and provide clearer signals. It is particularly useful for confirming trend strength and identifying potential reversals.
RSI Moving Average Input Settings:
MA Length: Default: 14
What it is: The period over which the Moving Average is calculated on the RSI.
What it does: Adjusts the smoothing of the RSI, helping to reduce false signals and provide a clearer trend indication.
Example: A 14-period moving average on the RSI can smooth out short-term fluctuations, making it easier to spot genuine overbought or oversold conditions.
MA Plot Style, Width, and Color:
What it is: Customization options for how the RSI Moving Average is displayed on the chart.
What it does: Allows you to adjust the line width and color, helping to differentiate the Moving Average from the main RSI line.
Example: Using a contrasting color for the RSI Moving Average (e.g., magenta) can help it stand out against the main RSI line, making it easier to interpret the indicator.
STOCHASTIC RSI
Display of Stochastic RSI:
Display of Stochastic RSI Setting:
Stochastic RSI Indicator Explanation
The Stochastic RSI (Stoch RSI) is a momentum oscillator that measures the level of the RSI relative to its high-low range over a set period of time. It is used to identify overbought and oversold conditions, providing potential buy and sell signals based on momentum shifts.
Stochastic RSI Input Settings:
Stochastic RSI Length: Default: 14
What it is: The period over which the Stochastic RSI is calculated.
What it does: Adjusts the sensitivity of the Stochastic RSI. A shorter length makes the indicator more responsive to recent price changes, while a longer length smooths out the fluctuations, reducing noise.
Example: A length of 14 is commonly used to identify momentum shifts over a medium-term period, providing a balanced view of potential overbought or oversold conditions.
Display of Stochastic RSI %K Line:
Stochastic RSI %K Line Explanation
The %K line in the Stochastic RSI is the main line that tracks the momentum of the RSI over the chosen period. It is the faster-moving component of the Stochastic RSI, often used to identify entry and exit points.
Stochastic RSI %K Input Settings:
%K Length: Default: 3
What it is: The period used for smoothing the %K line of the Stochastic RSI.
What it does: Smoothing the %K line helps reduce noise and provides a clearer signal for potential market reversals.
Example: A smoothing length of 3 is common, offering a balance between responsiveness and noise reduction, making it easier to spot significant momentum shifts.
%K Plot Style, Width, and Color:
What it is: Customization options for the visual representation of the %K line.
What it does: Allows you to adjust the appearance of the %K line on the chart, including line width and color, to fit your visual preferences.
Example: Setting a blue color and a medium width for the %K line makes it stand out clearly on the chart, helping to identify key points of momentum change.
%K Fill Color (Above):
What it is: The fill color that appears above the %K line on the chart.
What it does: Adds visual clarity by shading the area above the %K line, making it easier to interpret the direction and strength of momentum.
Example: Using a light blue fill color above the %K line can help emphasize bullish momentum, making it visually prominent.
Display of Stochastic RSI %D Line:
Stochastic RSI %D Line Explanation
The %D line in the Stochastic RSI is a moving average of the %K line and acts as a signal line. It is slower-moving compared to the %K line and is often used to confirm signals or identify potential reversals when it crosses the %K line.
Stochastic RSI %D Input Settings:
%D Length: Default: 3
What it is: The period used for smoothing the %D line of the Stochastic RSI.
What it does: Smooths out the %D line, making it less sensitive to short-term fluctuations and more reliable for identifying significant market signals.
Example: A length of 3 is often used to provide a smoothed signal line that can help confirm trends or reversals indicated by the %K line.
%D Plot Style, Width, and Color:
What it is: Customization options for the visual representation of the %D line.
What it does: Allows you to adjust the appearance of the %D line on the chart, including line width and color, to match your preferences.
Example: Setting an orange color and a thicker line width for the %D line can help differentiate it from the %K line, making crossover points easier to spot.
%D Fill Color (Below):
What it is: The fill color that appears below the %D line on the chart.
What it does: Adds visual clarity by shading the area below the %D line, making it easier to interpret bearish momentum.
Example: Using a light orange fill color below the %D line can highlight bearish conditions, making it visually easier to identify.
RSI & STOCHASTIC RSI OVERBOUGHT AND OVERSOLD LEVELS
Display of RSI & Stochastic with Overbought & Oversold Levels:
Display of RSI & Stochastic Overbought & Oversold Settings:
RSI & Stochastic Overbought & Oversold Levels Explanation
The Overbought (OB) and Oversold (OS) levels for RSI and Stochastic RSI indicators are key thresholds that help traders identify potential reversal points in the market. These levels are used to determine when an asset is likely overbought or oversold, which can signal a potential trend reversal.
RSI & Stochastic Overbought & Oversold Input Settings:
RSI & Stochastic Level 1 Overbought (OB) & Oversold (OS): Default: OB Level = 170, OS Level = 130
What it is: The first set of thresholds for determining overbought and oversold conditions for both RSI and Stochastic RSI indicators.
What it does: When the RSI or Stochastic RSI crosses above the overbought level, it suggests that the asset might be overbought, potentially signaling a sell opportunity. Conversely, when these indicators drop below the oversold level, it suggests the asset might be oversold, potentially signaling a buy opportunity.
Example: If the RSI crosses above 170, traders might look for signs of a potential trend reversal to the downside, while a cross below 130 might indicate a reversal to the upside.
RSI & Stochastic Level 2 Overbought (OB) & Oversold (OS): Default: OB Level = 180, OS Level = 120
What it is: The second set of thresholds for determining overbought and oversold conditions for both RSI and Stochastic RSI indicators.
What it does: These levels provide an additional set of reference points, allowing traders to differentiate between varying degrees of overbought and oversold conditions, potentially leading to more refined trading decisions.
Example: When the RSI crosses above 180, it might indicate an extreme overbought condition, which could be a stronger signal for a sell, while a cross below 120 might indicate an extreme oversold condition, which could be a stronger signal for a buy.
RSI & Stochastic Overbought (OB) Band Customization:
OB Level 1: Width, Style, and Color:
What it is: Customization options for the visual appearance of the first overbought band on the chart.
What it does: Allows you to set the line width, style (solid, dotted, dashed), and color for the first overbought band, enhancing its visibility on the chart.
Example: A dashed red line with medium width can clearly indicate the first overbought level, helping traders quickly identify when this threshold is crossed.
OB Level 2: Width, Style, and Color:
What it is: Customization options for the visual appearance of the second overbought band on the chart.
What it does: Allows you to set the line width, style, and color for the second overbought band, providing a clear distinction from the first band.
Example: A dashed red line with a slightly thicker width can represent a more significant overbought level, making it easier to differentiate from the first level.
RSI & Stochastic Oversold (OS) Band Customization:
OS Level 1: Width, Style, and Color:
What it is: Customization options for the visual appearance of the first oversold band on the chart.
What it does: Allows you to set the line width, style (solid, dotted, dashed), and color for the first oversold band, making it visually prominent.
Example: A dashed green line with medium width can highlight the first oversold level, helping traders identify potential buying opportunities.
OS Level 2: Width, Style, and Color:
What it is: Customization options for the visual appearance of the second oversold band on the chart.
What it does: Allows you to set the line width, style, and color for the second oversold band, providing an additional visual cue for extreme oversold conditions.
Example: A dashed green line with a thicker width can represent a more significant oversold level, offering a stronger visual cue for potential buying opportunities.
RSI DIVERGENCES
Display of RSI Divergence Labels:
Display of RSI Divergence Settings:
RSI Divergence Lookback Explanation
The RSI Divergence settings allow traders to customize the parameters for detecting divergences between the RSI (Relative Strength Index) and price action. Divergences occur when the price moves in the opposite direction to the RSI, potentially signaling a trend reversal. These settings help refine the accuracy of divergence detection by adjusting the lookback period and range. ( NOTE: This setting only imply to the RSI. This doesn't effect the STOCHASTIC RSI. )
RSI Divergence Lookback Input Settings:
Lookback Left: Default: 10
What it is: The number of bars to look back from the current bar to detect a potential divergence.
What it does: Defines the left-side lookback period for identifying pivot points in the RSI, which are used to spot divergences. A longer lookback period may capture more significant trends but could also miss shorter-term divergences.
Example: A setting of 10 bars means the script will consider pivot points up to 10 bars before the current bar to check for divergence patterns.
Lookback Right: Default: 1
What it is: The number of bars to look forward from the current bar to complete the divergence pattern.
What it does: Defines the right-side lookback period for confirming a potential divergence. This setting helps ensure that the identified divergence is valid by allowing the script to check subsequent bars for confirmation.
Example: A setting of 1 bar means the script will look at the next bar to confirm the divergence pattern, ensuring that the signal is reliable.
Lookback Range Min: Default: 5
What it is: The minimum range of bars required to detect a valid divergence.
What it does: Sets a lower bound on the range of bars considered for divergence detection. A lower minimum range might capture more frequent but possibly less significant divergences.
Example: Setting the minimum range to 5 ensures that only divergences spanning at least 5 bars are considered, filtering out very short-term patterns.
Lookback Range Max: Default: 60
What it is: The maximum range of bars within which a divergence can be detected.
What it does: Sets an upper bound on the range of bars considered for divergence detection. A larger maximum range might capture more significant divergences but could also include less relevant long-term patterns.
Example: Setting the maximum range to 60 bars allows the script to detect divergences over a longer timeframe, capturing more extended divergence patterns that could indicate major trend reversals.
RSI Divergence Explanation
RSI divergences occur when the RSI indicator and price action move in opposite directions, signaling potential trend reversals. This section of the settings allows traders to customize the appearance and detection of both regular and hidden bullish and bearish divergences.
RSI Divergence Input Settings:
R. Bullish Div Label: Default: True
What it is: An option to display labels for regular bullish divergences.
What it does: Enables or disables the visibility of labels that mark regular bullish divergences, where the price makes a lower low while the RSI makes a higher low, indicating a potential upward reversal.
Example: A trader might use this to spot buying opportunities in a downtrend when a bullish divergence suggests the trend may be reversing.
Bullish Label Color, Line Width, and Line Color:
What it is: Settings to customize the appearance of regular bullish divergence labels.
What it does: Allows you to choose the color of the labels, adjust the width of the divergence lines, and select the color for these lines.
Example: Selecting a green label color and a distinct line width makes bullish divergences easily recognizable on your chart.
R. Bearish Div Label: Default: True
What it is: An option to display labels for regular bearish divergences.
What it does: Enables or disables the visibility of labels that mark regular bearish divergences, where the price makes a higher high while the RSI makes a lower high, indicating a potential downward reversal.
Example: A trader might use this to spot selling opportunities in an uptrend when a bearish divergence suggests the trend may be reversing.
Bearish Label Color, Line Width, and Line Color:
What it is: Settings to customize the appearance of regular bearish divergence labels.
What it does: Allows you to choose the color of the labels, adjust the width of the divergence lines, and select the color for these lines.
Example: Choosing a red label color and a specific line width makes bearish divergences clearly stand out on your chart.
H. Bullish Div Label: Default: False
What it is: An option to display labels for hidden bullish divergences.
What it does: Enables or disables the visibility of labels that mark hidden bullish divergences, where the price makes a higher low while the RSI makes a lower low, indicating potential continuation of an uptrend.
Example: A trader might use this to confirm an existing uptrend when a hidden bullish divergence signals continued buying strength.
Hidden Bullish Label Color, Line Width, and Line Color:
What it is: Settings to customize the appearance of hidden bullish divergence labels.
What it does: Allows you to choose the color of the labels, adjust the width of the divergence lines, and select the color for these lines.
Example: A softer green color with a thinner line width might be chosen to subtly indicate hidden bullish divergences, keeping the chart clean while providing useful information.
H. Bearish Div Label: Default: False
What it is: An option to display labels for hidden bearish divergences.
What it does: Enables or disables the visibility of labels that mark hidden bearish divergences, where the price makes a lower high while the RSI makes a higher high, indicating potential continuation of a downtrend.
Example: A trader might use this to confirm an existing downtrend when a hidden bearish divergence signals continued selling pressure.
Hidden Bearish Label Color, Line Width, and Line Color:
What it is: Settings to customize the appearance of hidden bearish divergence labels.
What it does: Allows you to choose the color of the labels, adjust the width of the divergence lines, and select the color for these lines.
Example: A muted red color with a thinner line width might be selected to indicate hidden bearish divergences without overwhelming the chart.
Divergence Text Size and Color: Default: S (Small)
What it is: Settings to adjust the size and color of text labels for RSI divergences.
What it does: Allows you to customize the size and color of text labels that display the divergence information on the chart.
Example: Choosing a small text size with a bright white color can make divergence labels easily readable without taking up too much space on the chart.
STOCHASTIC DIVERGENCES
Display of Stochastic RSI Divergence Labels:
Display of Stochastic RSI Divergence Settings:
Stochastic RSI Divergence Explanation
Stochastic RSI divergences occur when the Stochastic RSI indicator and price action move in opposite directions, signaling potential trend reversals. These settings allow traders to customize the detection and visual representation of both regular and hidden bullish and bearish divergences in the Stochastic RSI.
Stochastic RSI Divergence Input Settings:
R. Bullish Div Label: Default: True
What it is: An option to display labels for regular bullish divergences in the Stochastic RSI.
What it does: Enables or disables the visibility of labels that mark regular bullish divergences, where the price makes a lower low while the Stochastic RSI makes a higher low, indicating a potential upward reversal.
Example: A trader might use this to spot buying opportunities in a downtrend when a bullish divergence in the Stochastic RSI suggests the trend may be reversing.
Bullish Label Color, Line Width, and Line Color:
What it is: Settings to customize the appearance of regular bullish divergence labels in the Stochastic RSI.
What it does: Allows you to choose the color of the labels, adjust the width of the divergence lines, and select the color for these lines.
Example: Selecting a blue label color and a distinct line width makes bullish divergences in the Stochastic RSI easily recognizable on your chart.
R. Bearish Div Label: Default: True
What it is: An option to display labels for regular bearish divergences in the Stochastic RSI.
What it does: Enables or disables the visibility of labels that mark regular bearish divergences, where the price makes a higher high while the Stochastic RSI makes a lower high, indicating a potential downward reversal.
Example: A trader might use this to spot selling opportunities in an uptrend when a bearish divergence in the Stochastic RSI suggests the trend may be reversing.
Bearish Label Color, Line Width, and Line Color:
What it is: Settings to customize the appearance of regular bearish divergence labels in the Stochastic RSI.
What it does: Allows you to choose the color of the labels, adjust the width of the divergence lines, and select the color for these lines.
Example: Choosing an orange label color and a specific line width makes bearish divergences in the Stochastic RSI clearly stand out on your chart.
H. Bullish Div Label: Default: False
What it is: An option to display labels for hidden bullish divergences in the Stochastic RSI.
What it does: Enables or disables the visibility of labels that mark hidden bullish divergences, where the price makes a higher low while the Stochastic RSI makes a lower low, indicating potential continuation of an uptrend.
Example: A trader might use this to confirm an existing uptrend when a hidden bullish divergence in the Stochastic RSI signals continued buying strength.
Hidden Bullish Label Color, Line Width, and Line Color:
What it is: Settings to customize the appearance of hidden bullish divergence labels in the Stochastic RSI.
What it does: Allows you to choose the color of the labels, adjust the width of the divergence lines, and select the color for these lines.
Example: A softer blue color with a thinner line width might be chosen to subtly indicate hidden bullish divergences, keeping the chart clean while providing useful information.
H. Bearish Div Label: Default: False
What it is: An option to display labels for hidden bearish divergences in the Stochastic RSI.
What it does: Enables or disables the visibility of labels that mark hidden bearish divergences, where the price makes a lower high while the Stochastic RSI makes a higher high, indicating potential continuation of a downtrend.
Example: A trader might use this to confirm an existing downtrend when a hidden bearish divergence in the Stochastic RSI signals continued selling pressure.
Hidden Bearish Label Color, Line Width, and Line Color:
What it is: Settings to customize the appearance of hidden bearish divergence labels in the Stochastic RSI.
What it does: Allows you to choose the color of the labels, adjust the width of the divergence lines, and select the color for these lines.
Example: A muted orange color with a thinner line width might be selected to indicate hidden bearish divergences without overwhelming the chart.
Divergence Text Size and Color: Default: S (Small)
What it is: Settings to adjust the size and color of text labels for Stochastic RSI divergences.
What it does: Allows you to customize the size and color of text labels that display the divergence information on the chart.
Example: Choosing a small text size with a bright white color can make divergence labels easily readable without taking up too much space on the chart.
Alert System:
Custom Alerts for Divergences and Reversals:
What it is: The script includes customizable alert conditions to notify you of detected divergences or potential reversals based on WaveTrend, RSI, and Stochastic RSI.
What it does: Helps you stay informed of key market movements without constantly monitoring the charts, enabling timely decisions.
Example: Setting an alert for regular bearish divergence on the WaveTrend could notify you of a potential sell opportunity as soon as it is detected.
How to Use Alerts:
Set up custom alerts in TradingView based on these conditions to be notified of potential trading opportunities. Alerts are triggered when the indicator detects conditions that match the selected criteria, such as divergences or potential reversals.
By following the detailed guidelines and examples above, you can effectively use and customize this powerful indicator to suit your trading strategy.
For further understanding and customization, refer to the input settings within the script and adjust them to match your trading style and preferences.
How Components Work Together
Synergy and Cross-Validation: The indicator combines multiple layers of analysis to validate trading signals. For example, a WaveTrend buy signal that coincides with a bullish divergence in RSI and positive fast money flow is likely to be more reliable than any single indicator’s signal. This cross-validation reduces the likelihood of false signals and enhances decision-making.
Comprehensive Market Analysis: Each component plays a role in analyzing different aspects of the market. WaveTrend focuses on trend strength, Money Flow indicators assess market sentiment, while RSI and Stochastic RSI offer detailed views of price momentum and potential reversals.
Ideal For
Traders who require a reliable, multifaceted tool for detecting market trends and reversals.
Investors seeking a deeper understanding of market dynamics across different timeframes and conditions, whether in forex, equities, or cryptocurrency markets.
This script is designed to provide a comprehensive tool for technical analysis, combining multiple indicators and divergence detection into one versatile and customizable script. It is especially useful for traders who want to monitor various indicators simultaneously and look for convergence or divergence signals across different technical tools.
Acknowledgements
Special thanks to these amazing creators for inspiration and their creations:
I want to thank these amazing creators for creating there amazing indicators , that inspired me and also gave me a head start by making this indicator! Without their amazing indicators it wouldn't be possible!
vumanchu: VuManChu Cipher B Divergences.
MisterMoTa: RSI + Divergences + Alerts .
DevLucem: Plain Stochastic Divergence.
Note
This indicator is designed to be a powerful tool in your trading arsenal. However , it is essential to backtest and adjust the settings according to your trading strategy before applying it to live trading . If you have any questions or need further assistance, feel free to reach out.
Stock WatchOverview
Watch list are very common in trading, but most of them simply provide the means of tracking a list of symbols and their current price. Then, you click through the list and perform some additional analysis individually from a chart setup. What this indicator is designed to do is provide a watch list that employs a high/low price range analysis in a table view across multiple time ranges for a much faster analysis of the symbols you are watching.
Discussion
The concept of this Stock Watch indicator is best understood when you think in terms of a 52 Week Range indication on many financial web sites. Taken a given symbol, what is the high and the low over a 52 week range and then determine where current price is within that range from a percentage perspective between 0% and 100%.
With this concept in mind, let's see how this Stock Watch indicator is meant to benefit.
There are four different H/L ranges relative to the chart's setting and a Scope property. Let's use a three month (3M) chart as our example and set the indicator's Scope = 4. A 3M chart provides three months of data in a single candle, now when we set the Scope = 4 we are stating that 1X is going to look over four candles for the high/low range.
The Scope property is used to determine how many candles it is to scan to determine the high/low range for the corresponding 1X, 3X, 5X and 10X periods. This is how different time ranges are put into perspective. Using a 3M chart with Scope = 4 would represent the following time windows:
- 1X = 3M * 4 is a 12 Months or 1 Year High/Low Range
- 3X = 3M * 4 * 3 is a 36 Months or 3 Years High/Low Range
- 5X = 3M * 4 * 5 is a 60 Months or 5 Years High/Low Range
- 10X = 3M * 4 * 10 is a 120 Months or 10 Years High/Low Range.
With these calculations, the indicator then determines where current price is within each of these High/Low ranges from a percentage perspective between 0% and 100%.
Once the 0% to 100% value is calculated, it then will shade the value according to a color gradient from red to green (or any other two colors you set the indictor to). This color shading really helps to interpret current price quickly.
The greater power to this range and color shading comes when you are able to see where price is according to price history across the multiple time windows. In this example, there is quick analysis across 1 Year, 3 Year, 5 Year and 10 Year windows.
Now let's further improve this quick analysis over 15 different stocks for which the indicator allows you to watch up to at any one time.
For value traders this is huge, because we're always looking for the bargains and we wait for price to be in the value range. Using this indicator helps to instantly see if price has entered a value range before we decide to do further analysis with other charting and fundamental tools.
The Code
The heart of all this is really very simple as you can see in the following code snippet. We're simply looking for the highest high and lowest low across the different scopes and calculating the percentage of the range where current price is for each symbol being watched.
scope = baseScope
watch1X = math.round(((watchClose - ta.lowest(watchLow, scope)) / (ta.highest(watchHigh, scope) - ta.lowest(watchLow, scope))) * 100, 0)
table.cell(tblWatch, columnId, 2, str.format("{0, number, #}%", watch1X), text_size = size.small, text_color = colorText, bgcolor = getBackColor(watch1X))
//3X Lookback
scope := baseScope * 3
watch3X = math.round(((watchClose - ta.lowest(watchLow, scope)) / (ta.highest(watchHigh, scope) - ta.lowest(watchLow, scope))) * 100, 0)
table.cell(tblWatch, columnId, 3, str.format("{0, number, #}%", watch3X), text_size = size.small, text_color = colorText, bgcolor = getBackColor(watch3X))
Conclusion
The example I've laid out here are for large time windows, because I'm a long term investor. However, keep in mind that this can work on any chart setting, you just need to remember that your chart's time period and scope work together to determine what 1X, 3X, 5X and 10X represent.
Let me try and give you one last scenario on this. Consider your chart is set for a 60 minute chart, meaning each candle represents 60 minutes of time and you set the Stock Watch indicator to a scope = 4. These settings would now represent the following and you would be watching up to 15 different stocks across these windows at one time.
1X = 60 minutes * 4 is 240 minutes or 4 hours of time.
3X = 60 minutes * 4 * 3 = 720 minutes or 12 hours of time.
5X = 60 minutes * 4 * 5 = 1200 minutes or 20 hours of time.
10X = 60 minutes * 4 * 10 = 2400 minutes or 40 hours of time.
I hope you find value in my contribution to the cause of trading, and if you have any comments or critiques, I would love to here from you in the comments.