Fancy Oscillator Screener [Daveatt]⬛ OVERVIEW
Building upon LeviathanCapital original RSI Screener (), this enhanced version brings comprehensive technical analysis capabilities to your trading workflow. Through an intuitive grid display, you can monitor multiple trading instruments simultaneously while leveraging powerful indicators to identify market opportunities in real-time.
⬛ FEATURES
This script provides a sophisticated visualization system that supports both cross rates and heat map displays, allowing you to track exchange rates and percentage changes with ease. You can organize up to 40 trading pairs into seven customizable groups, making it simple to focus on specific market segments or trading strategies.
If you overlay on any circle/asset on the chart, you'll see the accurate oscillator value displayed for that asset
⬛ TECHNICAL INDICATORS
The screener supports the following oscillators:
• RSI - the oscillator from the original script version
• Awesome Oscillator
• Chaikin Oscillator
• Stochastic RSI
• Stochastic
• Volume Oscillator
• CCI
• Williams %R
• MFI
• ROC
• ATR Multiple
• ADX
• Fisher Transform
• Historical Volatility
• External : connect your own custom oscillator
⬛ DYNAMIC SCALING
One of the key improvements in this version is the implementation of dynamic chart scaling. Unlike the original script which was optimized for RSI's 0-100 range, this version automatically adjusts its scale based on the selected oscillator.
This adaptation was necessary because different indicators operate on vastly different numerical ranges - for instance, CCI typically ranges from -200 to +200, while Williams %R operates from -100 to 0.
The dynamic scaling ensures that each oscillator's data is properly displayed within its natural range, making the visualization both accurate and meaningful regardless of which indicator you choose to use.
⬛ ALERTS
I've integrated a comprehensive alert system that monitors both overbought and oversold conditions.
Users can now set custom threshold levels for their alerts.
When any asset in your monitored group crosses these thresholds, the system generates an alert, helping you catch potential trading opportunities without constant manual monitoring.
em will help you stay informed of market movements and potential trading opportunities.
I hope you'll find this tool valuable in your trading journey
All the BEST,
Daveatt
Pine Dienstprogramme
BTC vs Altcoin CorrelationThis Pine Script indicator calculates and visualizes the rolling correlation between Bitcoin (BTC) and a selected altcoin, while providing insights into the percentage of time the correlation remains above a user-defined threshold. Users can independently configure the correlation calculation period and the lookback period for measuring the percentage of time above the threshold. The correlation is displayed as a color-coded line: green when above the threshold and red otherwise, with a dashed horizontal line marking the threshold level. A dynamic table displays the current correlation value and the percentage of time spent above the threshold within the specified period, enabling quick evaluation of correlation dynamics between BTC and the chosen altcoin.
Linear Regression Channel Screener [Daveatt]Hello traders
First and foremost, I want to extend a huge thank you to @LonesomeTheBlue for his exceptional Linear Regression Channel indicator that served as the foundation for this screener.
Original work can be found here:
Overview
This project demonstrates how to transform any open-source indicator into a powerful multi-asset screener.
The principles shown here can be applied to virtually any indicator you find interesting.
How to Transform an Indicator into a Screener
Step 1: Identify the Core Logic
First, identify the main calculations of the indicator.
In our case, it's the Linear Regression
Channel calculation:
get_channel(src, len) =>
mid = math.sum(src, len) / len
slope = ta.linreg(src, len, 0) - ta.linreg(src, len, 1)
intercept = mid - slope * math.floor(len / 2) + (1 - len % 2) / 2 * slope
endy = intercept + slope * (len - 1)
dev = 0.0
for x = 0 to len - 1 by 1
dev := dev + math.pow(src - (slope * (len - x) + intercept), 2)
dev
dev := math.sqrt(dev / len)
Step 2: Use request.security()
Pass the function to request.security() to analyze multiple assets:
= request.security(sym, timeframe.period, get_channel(src, len))
Step 3: Scale to Multiple Assets
PineScript allows up to 40 request.security() calls, letting you monitor up to 40 assets simultaneously.
Features of This Screener
The screener provides real-time trend detection for each monitored asset, giving you instant insights into market movements.
It displays each asset's position relative to its middle regression line, helping you understand price momentum.
The data is presented in a clean, organized table with color-coded trends for easy interpretation.
At its core, the screener performs trend detection based on regression slope calculations, clearly indicating whether an asset is in a bullish or bearish trend.
Each asset's price is tracked relative to its middle regression line, providing additional context about trend strength.
The color-coded visual feedback makes it easy to spot changes at a glance.
Built-in alerts notify you instantly when any asset experiences a trend change, ensuring you never miss important market moves.
Customization Tips
You can easily expand the screener by adding more symbols to the symbols array, adapting it to your watchlist.
The regression parameters can be adjusted to match your preferred trading timeframes and sensitivity.
The alert system is already configured to notify you of trend changes, but you can customize the alert messages and conditions to your needs.
Limitations
While powerful, the screener is bound by PineScript's limitation of 40 security calls, capping the maximum number of monitored assets.
Using AI to Help With Conversion
An interesting tip:
You can use AI tools to help convert single-asset indicators to screeners.
Simply provide the original code and ask for assistance in transforming it into a screener format. While the AI output might need some syntax adjustments, it can handle much of the heavy lifting in the conversion process.
Prompt (example) : " Please make a pinescript version 5 screener out of this indicator below or in attachment to scan 20 instruments "
I prefer Claude AI (Opus model) over ChatGPT for pinescript.
Conclusion
This screener transformation technique opens up endless possibilities for market analysis.
By following these steps, you can convert any indicator into a powerful multi-asset scanner, enhancing your trading toolkit significantly.
Remember: The power of a screener lies not just in monitoring multiple assets, but in applying consistent analysis across your entire watchlist in real-time.
Feel free to fork and modify this screener for your own needs.
Happy trading! 🚀📈
Daveatt
Mean Price
^^ Plotting switched to Line.
This method of financial time series (aka bars) downsampling is literally, naturally, and thankfully the best you can do in terms of maximizing info gain. You can finally chill and feed it to your studies & eyes, and probably use nothing else anymore.
(HL2 and occ3 also have use cases, but other aggregation methods? Not really, even if they do, the use cases are ‘very’ specific). Tho in order to understand why, you gotta read the following wall, or just believe me telling you, ‘I put it on my momma’.
The true story about trading volumes and why this is all a big misdirection
Actually, you don’t need to be a quant to get there. All you gotta do is stop blindly following other people’s contextual (at best) solutions, eg OC2 aggregation xD, and start using your own brain to figure things out.
Every individual trade (basically an imprint on 1D price space that emerges when market orders hit the order book) has several features like: price, time, volume, AND direction (Up if a market buy order hits the asks, Down if a market sell order hits the bids). Now, the last two features—volume and direction—can be effectively combined into one (by multiplying volume by 1 or -1), and this is probably how every order matching engine should output data. If we’re not considering size/direction, we’re leaving data behind. Moreover, trades aren’t just one-price dots all the time. One trade can consume liquidity on several levels of the order book, so a single trade can be several ticks big on the price axis.
You may think now that there are no zero-volume ticks. Well, yes and no. It depends on how you design an exchange and whether you allow intra-spread trades/mid-spread trades (now try to Google it). Intra-spread trades could happen if implemented when a matching engine receives both buy and sell orders at the same microsecond period. This way, you can match the orders with each other at a better price for both parties without even hitting the book and consuming liquidity. Also, if orders have different sizes, the remaining part of the bigger order can be sent to the order book. Basically, this type of trade can be treated as an OTC trade, having zero volume because we never actually hit the book—there’s no imprint. Another reason why it makes sense is when we think about volume as an impact or imbalance act, and how the medium (order book in our case) responds to it, providing information. OTC and mid-spread trades are not aggressive sells or buys; they’re neutral ticks, so to say. However huge they are, sometimes many blocks on NYSE, they don’t move the price because there’s no impact on the medium (again, which is the order book)—they’re not providing information.
... Now, we need to aggregate these trades into, let’s say, 1-hour bars (remember that a trade can have either positive or negative volume). We either don’t want to do it, or we don’t have this kind of information. What we can do is take already aggregated OHLC bars and extract all the info from them. Given the market is fractal, bars & trades gotta have the same set of features:
- Highest & lowest ticks (high & low) <- by price;
- First & last ticks (open & close) <- by time;
- Biggest and smallest ticks <- by volume.*
*e.g., in the array ,
2323: biggest trade,
-1212: smallest trade.
Now, in our world, somehow nobody started to care about the biggest and smallest trades and their inclusion in OHLC data, while this is actually natural. It’s the same way as it’s done with high & low and open & close: we choose the minimum and maximum value of a given feature/axis within the aggregation period.
So, we don’t have these 2 values: biggest and smallest ticks. The best we can do is infer them, and given the fact the biggest and smallest ticks can be located with the same probability everywhere, all we can do is predict them in the middle of the bar, both in time and price axes. That’s why you can see two HL2’s in each of the 3 formulas in the code.
So, summed up absolute volumes that you see in almost every trading platform are actually just a derivative metric, something that I call Type 2 time series in my own (proprietary ‘for now’) methods. It doesn’t have much to do with market orders hitting the non-uniform medium (aka order book); it’s more like a statistic. Still wanna use VWAP? Ok, but you gotta understand you’re weighting Type 1 (natural) time series by Type 2 (synthetic) ones.
How to combine all the data in the right way (khmm khhm ‘order’)
Now, since we have 6 values for each bar, let’s see what information we have about them, what we don’t have, and what we can do about it:
- Open and close: we got both when and where (time (order) and price);
- High and low: we got where, but we don’t know when;
- Biggest & smallest trades: we know shit, we infer it the way it was described before.'
By using the location of the close & open prices relative to the high & low prices, we can make educated guesses about whether high or low was made first in a given bar. It’s not perfect, but it’s ultimately all we can do—this is the very last bit of info we can extract from the data we have.
There are 2 methods for inferring volume delta (which I call simply volume) that are presented everywhere, even here on TradingView. Funny thing is, this is actually 2 parts of the 1 method. I wonder how many folks see through it xD. The same method can be used for both inferring volume delta AND making educated guesses whether high or low was made first.
Imagine and/or find the cases on your charts to understand faster:
* Close > open means we have an up bar and probably the volume is positive, and probably high was made later than low.
* Close < open means we have a down bar and probably the volume is negative, and probably low was made later than high.
Now that’s the point when you see that these 2 mentioned methods are actually parts of the 1 method:
If close = open, we still have another clue: distance from open/close pair to high (HC), and distance from open/close pair to low (LC):
* HC < LC, probably high was made later.
* HC > LC, probably low was made later.
And only if close = open and HC = LC, only in this case we have no clue whether high or low was made earlier within a bar. We simply don’t have any more information to even guess. This bar is called a neutral bar.
At this point, we have both time (order) and price info for each of our 6 values. Now, we have to solve another weighted average problem, and that’s it. We’ll weight prices according to the order we’ve guessed. In the neutral bar case, open has a weight of 1, close has a weight of 3, and both high and low have weights of 2 since we can’t infer which one was made first. In all cases, biggest and smallest ticks are modeled with HL2 and weighted like they’re located in the middle of the bar in a time sense.
P.S.: I’ve also included a "robust" method where all the bars are treated like neutral ones. I’ve used it before; obviously, it has lesser info gain -> works a bit worse.
ATR-based TP/SL with Dynamic RREnglish
This indicator combines the power of the Average True Range (ATR) with dynamic calculations for Take Profit (TP) and Stop Loss (SL) levels, offering a clear visualization of trading opportunities and their respective Risk-Reward Ratios (RRR).
Features:
Dynamic TP/SL Calculation:
TP and SL levels are derived using user-defined ATR multipliers for precise positioning.
Multipliers are flexible, allowing traders to adjust according to their strategies.
Risk-Reward Ratio (RRR):
Automatically calculates and displays the RRR for each trade signal.
Helps traders quickly assess if a trade aligns with their risk management plan.
Entry Conditions:
Buy signals occur when the closing price crosses above the 20-period Simple Moving Average (SMA).
Sell signals occur when the closing price crosses below the 20-period SMA.
Visual Aids:
Red and green lines indicate Stop Loss and Take Profit levels.
Blue and orange labels show the RRR for long and short trades, respectively.
How It Works:
The indicator uses the ATR to calculate TP and SL levels:
TP: Adjusted based on the desired Risk-Reward Ratio (RR).
SL: Proportional to the ATR multiplier.
Entry signals are plotted with "BUY" or "SELL" markers, while the respective TP/SL levels are drawn as horizontal lines.
Why Use This Indicator?
Perfect for traders who value precise risk management.
Helps identify trades with favorable RRR (e.g., greater than 1.5 or 2.0).
Ideal for swing traders, day traders, and scalpers looking to automate their decision-making process.
Customization:
ATR Length: Control the sensitivity of ATR-based calculations.
ATR Multipliers: Set the TP and SL distances relative to the ATR.
Desired RRR: Define the risk/reward ratio you aim to achieve.
Important Notes:
The indicator does not place trades automatically; it is for visual and analytical purposes.
Always backtest and combine it with additional analysis for best results.
French
Cet indicateur combine la puissance de l’Average True Range (ATR) avec des calculs dynamiques pour les niveaux de Take Profit (TP) et de Stop Loss (SL), tout en offrant une visualisation claire des opportunités de trading et de leurs Ratios Risque/Rendement (RRR).
Fonctionnalités :
Calcul Dynamique des TP/SL :
Les niveaux de TP et SL sont calculés à l'aide de multiplicateurs ATR définis par l’utilisateur pour une position précise.
Les multiplicateurs sont personnalisables pour s'adapter à votre stratégie de trading.
Ratio Risque/Rendement (RRR) :
Calcule et affiche automatiquement le ratio RRR pour chaque signal de trade.
Permet aux traders d’évaluer rapidement si un trade correspond à leur plan de gestion des risques.
Conditions d'Entrée :
Les signaux d'achat apparaissent lorsque le prix de clôture traverse au-dessus de la moyenne mobile simple (SMA) à 20 périodes.
Les signaux de vente apparaissent lorsque le prix de clôture traverse en dessous de la SMA à 20 périodes.
Aides Visuelles :
Lignes rouges et vertes pour indiquer les niveaux de Stop Loss et de Take Profit.
Étiquettes bleues et orange pour afficher le RRR des trades longs et courts, respectivement.
Comment Cela Fonctionne :
L'indicateur utilise l’ATR pour calculer les niveaux TP et SL :
TP : Calculé dynamiquement en fonction du ratio risque/rendement souhaité (RRR).
SL : Proportionnel au multiplicateur ATR défini par l’utilisateur.
Les signaux d’entrée sont représentés par des étiquettes "BUY" ou "SELL", tandis que les niveaux de TP/SL sont tracés sous forme de lignes horizontales.
Pourquoi Utiliser Cet Indicateur ?
Idéal pour les traders soucieux d’une gestion rigoureuse des risques.
Identifie les opportunités de trades avec des RRR favorables (par exemple, supérieurs à 1.5 ou 2.0).
Convient aux swing traders, day traders et scalpeurs souhaitant automatiser leur processus de décision.
Personnalisation :
Longueur de l’ATR : Contrôlez la sensibilité des calculs basés sur l’ATR.
Multiplicateurs ATR : Ajustez les distances TP et SL par rapport à l’ATR.
Ratio RRR souhaité : Définissez le ratio risque/rendement que vous visez.
Remarques Importantes :
Cet indicateur n’exécute pas de trades automatiquement ; il est destiné à un usage visuel et analytique uniquement.
Toujours backtester et combiner avec une analyse supplémentaire pour de meilleurs résultats.
parametre par type de trading:
1. Pour les Scalpers :
Style de trading : Trades rapides sur de petites variations de prix, souvent sur des unités de temps courtes (1 min, 5 min).
Recommandations de paramètres :
ATR Length : 7 (plus court pour réagir rapidement à la volatilité).
Multiplicateur SL : 1.0 (Stop Loss proche pour limiter les pertes).
RR souhaité : 1.5 à 2.0 (bon équilibre entre risque et récompense).
Résultat attendu : Des trades fréquents, avec une probabilité raisonnable de toucher le TP tout en limitant les pertes.
2. Pour les Day Traders :
Style de trading : Trades qui durent plusieurs heures dans la journée, souvent sur des unités de temps moyennes (15 min, 1h).
Recommandations de paramètres :
ATR Length : 14 (standard pour capturer une volatilité modérée).
Multiplicateur SL : 1.5 (Stop Loss à distance raisonnable pour supporter les fluctuations intrajournalières).
RR souhaité : 2.0 à 3.0 (ciblez une bonne récompense par rapport au risque).
Résultat attendu : Moins de trades, mais un RR élevé pour compenser les pertes potentielles.
3. Pour les Swing Traders :
Style de trading : Trades qui durent plusieurs jours, souvent sur des unités de temps longues (4h, 1 jour).
Recommandations de paramètres :
ATR Length : 20 (pour capturer des mouvements de volatilité plus larges).
Multiplicateur SL : 2.0 (Stop Loss large pour supporter des fluctuations importantes).
RR souhaité : 3.0 ou plus (ciblez de gros mouvements de prix).
Résultat attendu : Des trades moins fréquents mais potentiellement très lucratifs.
4. Pour les Actifs Volatils (Crypto, Commodités) :
Problème spécifique : Les actifs volatils ont souvent des mouvements brusques.
Recommandations de paramètres :
ATR Length : 7 ou 10 (plus court pour suivre rapidement les variations).
Multiplicateur SL : 1.5 à 2.0 (assez large pour ne pas être déclenché prématurément).
RR souhaité : 1.5 à 2.0 (favorisez des récompenses réalistes sur des mouvements volatils).
Résultat attendu : Trades qui s’adaptent à la volatilité sans sortir trop tôt.
5. Pour les Marchés Stables (Indices, Actions Blue Chip) :
Problème spécifique : Les mouvements sont souvent lents et prévisibles.
Recommandations de paramètres :
ATR Length : 14 ou 20 (capture une volatilité modérée).
Multiplicateur SL : 1.0 à 1.5 (Stop Loss serré pour maximiser l’efficacité).
RR souhaité : 2.0 à 3.0 (ciblez des ratios plus élevés sur des mouvements moins fréquents).
Résultat attendu : Maximisation des profits sur des tendances claires.
Recommandation Générale :
Si vous ne savez pas par où commencer, utilisez ces paramètres par défaut :
ATR Length : 14
Multiplicateur SL : 1.5
RR souhaité : 2.0
Checklist By TAZFX with Trade ScoreTrading Checklist is a customizable indicator designed for traders who want to stay disciplined and stick to their trading rules. Using this indicator, you can easily create and display your own personalized checklist of trading rules directly on your TradingView chart.
1. Customizable Settings:
• Positioning : Place the table in one of nine positions on the chart (e.g., bottom left, top right).
• Header : Modify the banner text, size, and color.
• Row Content : Define text for each row and control visibility.
• Appearance : Adjust text and background colors.
2. Checklist Table:
•Displays up to 8 rows with checkboxes (✅/❌) and custom labels for trade evaluation.
•Useful for tracking whether specific trade conditions or rules are met.
3. Trade Score Calculation:
•The Trade Score is a percentage that shows how many of your checklist items are checked compared to the total visible items.
Customizable Psychological LevelsThe Customizable Psychological Levels indicator is designed to simplify the process of marking psychological levels on your chart without the need to manually add lines. Psychological levels are critical price zones where market participants often make decisions, such as round numbers or price levels that align with key technical analysis thresholds.
This indicator offers a fully automated way to plot these levels, with customizable options for intervals, colors, line thickness, and styles. Traders can focus more on their analysis and decision-making while relying on this tool to display consistent and accurate psychological levels across different timeframes.
Key Features:
Automated Level Drawing:
Major, intermediate, and minor levels are plotted automatically based on user-defined intervals.
No need to draw lines manually, saving time and ensuring precision.
Customizable Settings:
Choose intervals for each level type (major, intermediate, minor).
Select unique colors, line thickness, and styles (solid, dashed, or dotted) to distinguish levels visually.
Non-Overlapping Levels:
Includes an option to prevent overlapping levels, ensuring a clean and organized chart.
Dynamic or Fixed Levels:
Levels adjust dynamically to the chart’s price range, making them suitable for various instruments and timeframes.
Benefits:
Enhances productivity by automating the process of marking psychological levels.
Offers a highly customizable and visually appealing solution for traders who rely on psychological levels in their trading strategies.
Helps traders quickly identify critical price zones and make informed decisions.
This tool is perfect for both beginner and experienced traders who want to streamline their workflow while maintaining a professional and systematic approach to technical analysis.
Volume HighlightVolume Highlight
Description:
This script helps users analyze trading volume by:
1. Highlighting the highest volume bars:
• Trading sessions with volume equal to or exceeding the highest value over the last 20 periods are displayed in purple.
• Other sessions are displayed in light gray.
2. Displaying the 20-period SMA (Simple Moving Average):
• A 20-period SMA line of the volume is included to track the general trend of trading volume.
Key Features:
• Color-coded Highlights:
• Quickly identify trading sessions with significant volume spikes.
• 20-Period SMA Line:
• Observe the overall trend of trading volume.
• Intuitive Volume Bars:
• Volume bars are clearly displayed for easy interpretation.
How to Use:
1. Add the script to your chart on TradingView.
2. Look at the color of the volume bars:
• Purple: Sessions with the highest trading volume in the past 20 periods.
• Light gray: Other sessions.
3. Use the 20-period SMA line to analyze volume trends.
Purpose:
• Analyze market momentum through trading volume.
• Support trading decisions by identifying significant volume spikes.
Illustration:
• A chart showing color-coded volume bars and the 20-period SMA line.
Stick Figure - AYNETKey Features
Customizable Inputs:
base_price: Sets the vertical position (price level) where the figure's feet are placed.
bar_offset: Adjusts the horizontal placement of the stick figure on the chart.
body_length, arm_length, leg_length, head_size: Control the proportions of the stick figure.
Stick Figure Components:
Head: A horizontal line to symbolize the head.
Body: A vertical line for the torso.
Arms: A horizontal line extending from the torso.
Legs: Two diagonal lines representing the legs.
Dynamic Positioning:
The stick figure can be moved along the chart using bar_offset (horizontal) and base_price (vertical).
How It Works
Head:
A horizontal line (line.new) is drawn above the torso using the specified head_size.
Body:
A vertical line connects the head to the base price (base_price).
Arms and Legs:
Arms are horizontal lines extending from the middle of the body.
Legs are diagonal lines extending from the bottom of the torso.
Error Handling:
All x1 and x2 parameters are converted to int using int() to comply with Pine Script's requirements.
Example Use Case
This script is purely for fun and visualization:
Create visual markers for specific price levels or events.
Customize the stick figure's proportions to make it more prominent on the chart.
Let me know if you'd like further refinements or additions! 😊
[Stuppieeeeeee] - Multiple vertical timeframes linesEnhance your trading experience with this intuitive indicator that displays vertical lines on your chart to mark the start of new bars in higher timeframes. Whether you're analyzing on a 5-minute chart or any other lower timeframe, this tool helps you visualize when significant periods begin on larger scales like hourly, daily, or even monthly charts.
Key Features:
Multiple Timeframes Supported: Choose from 5 minutes, 15 minutes, 1 hour, 4 hours, 12 hours, daily, weekly, and monthly timeframes to display vertical lines.
Customizable Appearance: Personalize each set of lines by adjusting their colors, including transparency levels, line styles (solid, dashed, dotted), and widths to suit your preferences and enhance visibility.
Automatic Visibility Management: The indicator intelligently hides lines for timeframes that are equal to or lower than your current chart timeframe, keeping your chart clean and focused.
Future Projection: Not only does it mark the start of current higher timeframe bars, but it also projects lines into the near future. This feature allows you to anticipate upcoming significant time intervals, aiding in better planning and decision-making.
Layer Control: You have the ability to control which lines appear above others. By adjusting the drawing order and using transparency settings, you ensure that all important lines are visible without cluttering your chart.
Benefits:
Enhanced Multi-Timeframe Analysis: Quickly identify when higher timeframe bars start while analyzing lower timeframe charts, helping you align your trades with significant market movements.
Improved Market Structure Understanding: Visual cues from the vertical lines aid in recognizing patterns and trends that span across different timeframes.
Strategic Planning: Anticipate key time intervals with future projection lines, allowing you to prepare for potential market shifts.
How to Use:
Apply the Indicator:
Add the indicator to your TradingView chart as you would with any other tool.
It's most effective when used on lower timeframe charts (like 5-minute or 15-minute charts) to display lines from higher timeframes.
Customize Settings:
Open the indicator's settings panel.
For each timeframe, adjust the line color, style, width, and transparency to your liking.
Set the transparency to allow underlying lines to show through if desired.
Interpret the Lines:
Vertical lines will appear at the start of new bars for the higher timeframes you've selected.
Use these visual markers to inform your entry and exit points, aligning them with larger market movements.
Pay attention to future lines to anticipate upcoming periods of interest.
Notes:
Performance Considerations: Displaying a large number of lines may impact chart performance. If you notice any lag, consider reducing the number of active timeframes or increasing line transparency.
TradingView Limitations: Be aware that TradingView limits the number of drawing objects on a chart. The indicator is designed to manage this, but extremely long timeframes or high bar counts might affect its operation.
Manual Trading Checklist by Afnan TajuddinHey traders! This Trading Checklist indicator like your personal to-do list right on your chart! Here’s what it does:
Easy Tracking: Seven checkboxes to make sure you’ve done all your trading steps.
Colorful Signs: Green "✔" for done stuff and red "✘" for things you need to fix.
Make It Yours: Change where the table is on the chart, pick your favorite colors, and set the text size just how you like it.
Simple Setup: Rename the checklist items and toggle them on or off in the settings.
Clean Look: It stays neat on your chart without messing things up.
Whether you’re just starting out or you’ve been trading for a while, this checklist helps you stay organized and stick to your plan. Perfect for anyone who loves keeping things tidy and on track!
Important to Know: This checklist is not dynamic or automatic and not specific to any symbol. You need to manually check it every time for all the stocks you’re planning to trade. It won’t do the checking for you, so make sure to update it yourself! 🚨
Enhanced Trading Alerts# Enhanced Multi-Symbol EMA Trading System with Smart Alerts
## 📊 Overview
A powerful multi-symbol trading system that monitors up to 6 symbols simultaneously for high-probability trading setups using advanced EMA crossover strategies, enhanced with volume confirmation and RSI filters. Perfect for swing traders and position traders focusing on quality tech stocks.
## 🎯 Key Features
- **Multi-Symbol Monitoring**: Simultaneously tracks 6 different symbols
- **Advanced EMA Strategy**: Uses dual EMA system (320 & 820 periods) for trend confirmation
- **Volume Validation**: Confirms signals with volume surge analysis
- **RSI Filter**: Adds momentum confirmation to avoid false signals
- **Smart Risk Management**: Automatic stop-loss and take-profit calculations
- **Detailed Alerts**: Comprehensive alert messages with key price levels
## 📈 Trading Signals
### Buy Signals Generated When:
- Price crosses above the slow EMA (820)
- Fast EMA (320) confirms the trend
- RSI is in optimal range (not overbought)
- Volume surge confirms the movement
- Risk levels automatically calculated
### Sell Signals Generated When:
- Price crosses below the slow EMA (820)
- Fast EMA (320) confirms the downtrend
- RSI confirms momentum shift
- Volume surge validates the movement
## ⚙️ Customizable Parameters
- **EMA Lengths**: Adjust fast and slow EMA periods
- **Volume Threshold**: Set minimum volume surge multiplier
- **RSI Settings**: Customize overbought/oversold levels
- **Risk Management**: Adjustable stop-loss and take-profit percentages
- **Symbol Selection**: Choose any 6 symbols to monitor
## 🎨 Visual Elements
- Blue line: Fast EMA (320)
- Red line: Slow EMA (820)
- Purple line: RSI indicator
- Clear visual representation of trend changes
## 📱 Smart Alerts
Detailed alert messages include:
- Symbol name and signal type
- Current price level
- RSI value
- Stop-loss price
- Take-profit target
- Volume surge multiplier
## 💡 Best Practices
1. **Timeframe Selection**:
- Best suited for 1H, 4H, or Daily timeframes
- Can be adapted for swing or position trading
2. **Risk Management**:
- Use suggested stop-loss levels
- Follow take-profit targets
- Consider volume confirmation strength
3. **Multiple Chart Setup**:
- Create multiple instances for more symbols
- Group correlated assets together
- Use different alert sounds for different setups
## 🎓 Usage Tips
- Monitor strongest tech stocks for best results
- Combine with market sentiment analysis
- Use volume surge as quality filter
- Wait for all conditions to align before trading
- Consider overall market conditions
## ⚠️ Risk Warning
This indicator is for informational purposes only. Always conduct your own analysis and consider your risk tolerance before trading. Past performance does not guarantee future results.
## 📌 Version History
- v1.0: Initial release with multi-symbol support
- v1.1: Added volume surge confirmation
- v1.2: Enhanced alert system with risk levels
- v1.3: Added RSI filter and improved signal quality
## 🔄 Regular Updates
Subscribe to this script for regular updates and improvements. Feel free to suggest features in the comments section.
## 📗 Default Symbols
- TSLA (Tesla)
- NVDA (NVIDIA)
- AVGO (Broadcom)
- TSM (Taiwan Semiconductor)
- META (Meta Platforms)
- AMZN (Amazon)
You can customize these symbols to match your trading preferences.
Good luck trading! 🍀
Economic Seasons [Daveatt]Ever wondered what season your economy is in?
Just like Mother Nature has her four seasons, the economy cycles through its own seasons! This indicator helps you visualize where we are in the economic cycle by tracking two key metrics:
📊 What We're Tracking:
1. Interest Rates (USIRYY) - The yearly change in interest rates
2. Inflation Rate (USINTR) - The rate at which prices are rising
The magic happens when we normalize these values (fancy math that makes the numbers play nice together) and compare them to their recent averages. We use a lookback period to calculate the standard deviation and determine if we're seeing higher or lower than normal readings.
🔄 The Four Economic Seasons & Investment Strategy:
1. 🌸 Goldilocks (↑Growth, ↓Inflation)
"Not too hot, not too cold" - The economy is growing steadily without overheating.
BEST TIME TO: Buy growth stocks, technology, consumer discretionary
WHY: Companies can grow earnings in this ideal environment of low rates and stable prices
2. 🌞 Reflation (↑Growth, ↑Inflation)
"Party time... but watch your wallet!" - The economy is heating up.
BEST TIME TO: Buy commodities, banking stocks, real estate
WHY: These sectors thrive when inflation rises alongside growth
3. 🌡️ Inflation (↓Growth, ↑Inflation)
"Ouch, my purchasing power!" - Growth slows while prices keep rising.
BEST TIME TO: Rotate into value stocks, consumer staples, healthcare
WHY: These defensive sectors maintain pricing power during inflationary periods
4. ❄️ Deflation (↓Growth, ↓Inflation)
"Winter is here" - Both growth and inflation are falling.
BEST TIME TO: Focus on quality bonds, cash positions, and dividend aristocrats
WHY: Capital preservation becomes key; high-quality fixed income provides safety
🎯 Strategic Trading Points:
- BUY AGGRESSIVELY: During late Deflation/early Goldilocks (the spring thaw)
- HOLD & ACCUMULATE: Throughout Goldilocks and early Reflation
- START TAKING PROFITS: During late Reflation/early Inflation
- DEFENSIVE POSITIONING: Throughout Inflation and Deflation
⚠️ Warning Signs to Watch:
- Goldilocks → Reflation: Time to reduce growth stock exposure
- Reflation → Inflation: Begin rotating into defensive sectors
- Inflation → Deflation: Quality becomes crucial
- Deflation → Goldilocks: Start building new positions
The blue dot shows you where we are right now in this cycle.
The red arrows in the middle remind us that this is a continuous cycle - one season flows into the next, just like in nature!
💡 Pro Tip: The transitions between seasons often provide the best opportunities - but also the highest risks. Use additional indicators and fundamental analysis to confirm these shifts.
Remember: Just like you wouldn't wear a winter coat in summer, you shouldn't use a Goldilocks strategy during Inflation! Time your trades with the seasons. 🎯
Happy Trading! 📈
Mins Before Market Close AlertThis script will set an alert X mins before the market closes.
This is meant to be added to daily charts (calculations based off of daily bars).
This script can be useful for sending webhooks before the market closes to close open positions or to open new ones.
Simply add it to your daily chart and set up your desired alert (email, webhook, sound, etc.).
You can also change the chart marker to a different shape, color, or location to your preference.
Enjoy this simple alert!
Market Stats Panel [Daveatt]█ Introduction
I've created a script that brings TradingView's watchlist stats panel functionality directly to your charts. This isn't just another performance indicator - it's a pixel-perfect (kidding) recreation of TradingView's native stats panel.
Important Notes
You might need to adjust manually the scaling the firs time you're using this script to display nicely all the elements.
█ Core Features
Performance Metrics
The panel displays key performance metrics (1W, 1M, 3M, 6M, YTD, 1Y) in real-time, with color-coded boxes (green for positive, red for negative) for instant performance assessment.
Display Modes
Switch seamlessly between absolute prices and percentage returns, making it easy to compare assets across different price scales.
Absolute mode
Percent mode
Historical Comparison
View year-over-year performance with color-coded lines, allowing for quick historical pattern recognition and analysis.
Data Structure Innovation
Let's talk about one of the most interesting challenges I faced. PineScript has this quirky limitation where request.security() can only return 127 tuples at most. £To work around this, I implemented a dual-request system. The first request handles indices 0-63, while the second one takes care of indices 64-127.
This approach lets us maintain extensive historical data without compromising script stability.
And here's the cool part: if you need to handle even more years of historical data, you can simply extend this pattern by adding more request.security() calls.
Each additional call can fetch another batch of monthly open prices and timestamps, following the same structure I've used.
Think of it as building with LEGO blocks - you can keep adding more pieces to extend your historical reach.
Flexible Date Range
Unlike many scripts that box you into specific timeframes, I've designed this one to be completely flexible with your date selection. You can set any start year, any end year, and the script will dynamically scale everything to match. The visual presentation automatically adjusts to whatever range you choose, ensuring your data is always displayed optimally.
█ Customization Options
Visual Settings
The panel's visual elements are highly customizable. You can adjust the panel width to perfectly fit your workspace, fine-tune the line thickness to match your preferences, and enjoy the pre-defined year color scheme that makes tracking historical performance intuitive and visually appealing.
Box Dimensions
Every aspect of the performance boxes can be tailored to your needs. Adjust their height and width, fine-tune the spacing between them, and position the entire panel exactly where you want it on your chart. The goal is to make this tool feel like it's truly yours.
█ Technical Challenges Solved
Polyline Precision
Creating precise polylines was perhaps the most demanding aspect of this project.
The challenge was ensuring accurate positioning across both time and price axes, while handling percentage mode scaling with precision.
The script constantly updates the current year's data in real-time, seamlessly integrating new information as it comes in.
Axis Management
Getting the axes right was like solving a complex puzzle. The Y-axis needed to scale dynamically whether you're viewing absolute prices or percentages.
The X-axis required careful month labeling that stays clean and readable regardless of your selected timeframe.
Everything needed to align perfectly while maintaining proper spacing in all conditions.
█ Final Notes
This tool transforms complex market data into clear, actionable insights. Whether you're day trading or analyzing long-term trends, it provides the information you need to make informed decisions. And remember, while we can't predict the future, we can certainly be better prepared for it with the right tools at hand.
A word of warning though - seeing those red numbers in a beautifully formatted panel doesn't make them any less painful! 😉
---
Happy Trading! May your charts be green and your stops be far away!
Daveatt
Pine Execution MapPine Script Execution Map
Overview:
This is an educational script for Pine Script developers. The script includes data structure, functions/methods, and process to capture and print Pine Script execution map of functions called while pine script execution.
Map of execution is produced for last/latest candle execution.
The script also has example code to call execution map methods and generate Pine Execution map.
Use cases:
Pine script developers can get view of how the functions are called
This can also be used while debugging the code and know which functions are called vs what developer expect code to do
One can use this while using any of the open source published script and understand how public script is organized and how functions of the script are called.
Code components:
User defined type
type EMAP
string group
string sub_group
int level
array emap = array.new()
method called internally by other methods to generate level of function being executed
method id(string tag) =>
if(str.startswith(tag, "MAIN"))
exe_level.set(0, 0)
else if(str.startswith(tag, "END"))
exe_level.set(0, exe_level.get(0) - 1)
else
exe_level.set(0, exe_level.get(0) + 1)
exe_level.get(0)
Method called from main/global scope to record execution of main scope code. There should be only one call to this method at the start of global scope.
method main(string tag) =>
this = EMAP.new()
this.group := "MAIN"
this.sub_group := tag
this.level := "MAIN".id()
emap.push(this)
Method called from main/global scope to record end of execution of main scope code. There should be only one call to this method at the end of global scope.
method end_main(string tag) =>
this = EMAP.new()
this.group := "END_MAIN"
this.sub_group := tag
this.level := 0
emap.push(this)
Method called from start of each function to record execution of function code
method call(string tag) =>
this = EMAP.new()
this.group := "SUB"
this.sub_group := tag
this.level := "SUB".id()
emap.push(this)
Method called from end of each function to record end of execution of function code
method end_call(string tag) =>
this = EMAP.new()
this.group := "END_SUB"
this.sub_group := tag
this.level := "END_SUB".id()
emap.push(this)
Pine code which generates execution map and show it as a label tooltip.
if(barstate.islast)
for rec in emap
if(not str.startswith(rec.group, "END"))
lvl_tab = str.repeat("", rec.level+1, "\t")
txt = str.format("=> {0} {1}> {2}", lvl_tab, rec.level, rec.sub_group)
debug.log(txt)
debug.lastr()
Snapshot 1:
This is the output of the script and can be viewed by hovering mouse pointer over the blue color diamond shaped label
Snapshot 2:
How to read the Pine execution map
Hinton Map█ HINTON MAP
This script displays a Hinton Map visualization of market data for user-defined tickers and timeframes. It uses color gradients to represent the magnitude and direction of price change, RSI, and a combination of both.
This is one example. You can modify and try other values as you wish, but do keep the incoming values between -1 and 1.
In the Example Usage:
Users can input up to 5 symbols and 5 timeframes. For each ticker/timeframe combination:
The box size represents the relative magnitude of the 2-bar percentage change.
The box fill color represents the direction and magnitude of the 2-bar percentage change.
The box border color and thickness represent the RSI deviation from 50.
The inner box color represents a combination of price change magnitude and RSI deviation from 50.
Hovering over each box displays a tooltip with the ticker, timeframe, percentage change, and RSI.
Inputs:
• Unit Size (bars):
The size of each Hinton unit in bars.
Type: int
Default Value: 10
• Border Width:
The base width of the inner box border.
Type: int
Default Value: 3
• Negative Hue (0-360):
The hue value for negative price changes (0-360).
Type: float
Default Value: 100
• Positive Hue (0-360):
The hue value for positive price changes (0-360).
Type: float
Default Value: 180
• Ticker 1-5:
The tickers to display on the Hinton map.
Type: string
Default Value: AAPL
• Timeframes (comma separated):
The timeframes to display on the Hinton map (comma-separated).
Type: string
Default Value: 1, 5, 60, 1D, 1W
(Fun Note: My Home town is named `Hinton`)
DYNAMIC USD MOMENTUM INDICATOR
Hello traders,
Welcome to my script, an indicator helping you to quickly see the performance of USD in constant daily comparison to other currencies.
This script requests price data from other charts but displays overbought and oversold labels on any selected chart currency pair.
See attached images to spot high probability reversal days when USD is in extremes against multiple other currencies. The output labels represent the currency traded against USD and reaching overbought and oversold zoned on a dynamic RSI scale.
Suggested pairs with higher co relation to stronger or weaker dollar:
AUD/USD, CAD/USD, EUR/USD, GBP/USD, NZD/USD
CHF/USD and JPY/USD require more in depth analysis of individual performance of JPY AND CHF
Mars Signals - SSL Trend AnalyzerIntroduction
The "Mars Signals - Precision Trend Analyzer with SSL Baseline & Price Action Zones" is a comprehensive technical analysis tool designed for traders seeking to enhance their market analysis and trading strategies. This indicator integrates multiple advanced trading concepts, including dynamic moving averages, trend detection algorithms, momentum indicators, volume analysis, higher timeframe confirmation, candlestick pattern recognition, and precise price action zones. By combining these elements, the indicator aims to provide clear and actionable buy and sell signals, helping traders to make informed decisions in various market conditions.
Core Components and Functionality
1.Dynamic Baseline Calculation
Moving Average Types: The indicator allows users to select from a variety of moving average types for the baseline calculation, including Simple Moving Average (SMA), Exponential Moving Average (EMA), Hull Moving Average (HMA), Weighted Moving Average (WMA), Double EMA (DEMA), Triple EMA (TEMA), Least Squares Moving Average (LSMA), Triangular Moving Average (TMA), Kijun (from Ichimoku Kinko Hyo), and McGinley's Dynamic.
Baseline Length: Users can customize the length of the moving average, providing flexibility to adjust the sensitivity of the baseline to market movements.
Signal Line Generation: The indicator computes a dynamic signal line based on the relationship between the close price and the moving averages of the high and low prices. This signal line adapts to market volatility and trend changes.
2.SSL Baseline Integration
SSL Baseline: In addition to the primary baseline, the indicator incorporates an SSL (Semaphore Signal Level) Baseline, which further refines trend detection by considering the highs and lows over a specified period.
Dual Confirmation: The combination of the primary baseline and the SSL baseline enhances the reliability of the trend signals by requiring agreement between both baselines before generating a signal.
3.Momentum and Trend Filters
Relative Strength Index (RSI): The indicator uses the RSI to assess the momentum of price movements, filtering out signals that occur during overbought or oversold conditions.
Moving Average Convergence Divergence (MACD): The MACD is employed to identify the direction and strength of the trend, adding another layer of confirmation to the signals.
Average Directional Index (ADX): The ADX measures the strength of the trend, ensuring that signals are generated only when the market shows significant directional movement.
4.Volume Analysis
Volume Filter: An optional volume filter compares the current volume to its moving average, allowing traders to focus on signals that occur during periods of higher market activity.
5.Higher Timeframe Confirmation
Multi-Timeframe Analysis: The indicator can incorporate data from a higher timeframe, comparing the current price to the higher timeframe's baseline and signal line. This feature helps traders align their trades with the broader market trend.
6.Candlestick Pattern Recognition
Bullish Patterns: The indicator detects bullish patterns such as Bullish Engulfing, Piercing Line, Hammer, and Doji.
Bearish Patterns: It also identifies bearish patterns like Bearish Engulfing, Dark Cloud Cover, Shooting Star, and Doji.
Pattern Prioritization: The patterns are prioritized to highlight the most significant formations, which can serve as additional confirmation for trade entries and exits.
7.Price Action Zones
Support and Resistance Levels: The indicator automatically identifies pivot highs and lows to establish dynamic support and resistance levels.
Zone Visualization: It draws shaded rectangles on the chart to represent these zones, providing a clear visual aid for potential reversal or breakout areas.
ATR-Based Zone Width: The zones' thickness is dynamically calculated using the Average True Range (ATR), adjusting to the current market volatility.
Background Coloring: The chart background changes color when the price is above the maximum resistance or below the minimum support, alerting traders to significant price movements.
Interpreting the Signals
1.Buy Signals
Conditions:
Price crosses above the signal line.
RSI is below 70 (not overbought).
MACD line is above the signal line (indicating bullish momentum).
ADX is above the user-defined threshold (default is 20), confirming a strong trend.
(Optional) Volume is above its moving average if the volume filter is enabled.
(Optional) Price is above the higher timeframe baseline and signal line if the higher timeframe filter is enabled.
(Optional) A bullish candlestick pattern is detected if the candlestick pattern filter is enabled.
Visual Indicators:
An upward-pointing label with the text "BUY" appears below the price bar.
The baseline and SSL baseline lines turn to colors indicating bullish conditions.
2.Sell Signals
Conditions:
Price crosses below the signal line.
RSI is above 30 (not oversold).
MACD line is below the signal line (indicating bearish momentum).
ADX is above the user-defined threshold, confirming a strong trend.
(Optional) Volume is above its moving average if the volume filter is enabled.
(Optional) Price is below the higher timeframe baseline and signal line if the higher timeframe filter is enabled.
(Optional) A bearish candlestick pattern is detected if the candlestick pattern filter is enabled.
Visual Indicators:
A downward-pointing label with the text "SELL" appears above the price bar.
The baseline and SSL baseline lines turn to colors indicating bearish conditions.
3.Support and Resistance Zones
Interpretation:
Resistance Zones: Represent areas where the price may face selling pressure. A break above these zones can signal a strong bullish move.
Support Zones: Represent areas where the price may find buying interest. A break below these zones can signal a strong bearish move.
Background Color:
The background turns red when the price is above the maximum resistance, indicating potential overextension.
The background turns green when the price is below the minimum support, indicating potential undervaluation.
Effective Usage Strategies
1.Customization
Adjusting Baseline and SSL Settings: Traders should experiment with different moving average types and lengths to match their trading style and the specific characteristics of the asset being analyzed.
Filtering Parameters: Modify RSI, MACD, and ADX settings to fine-tune the sensitivity of the signals.
Volume and Higher Timeframe Filters: Enable these filters to add robustness to the signals, especially in volatile markets or when trading higher timeframes.
2.Combining with Other Analysis
Fundamental Analysis: Use the indicator in conjunction with fundamental insights to validate technical signals.
Risk Management: Always apply proper risk management techniques, such as setting stop-loss and take-profit levels based on the support and resistance zones provided by the indicator.
3.Backtesting
Historical Analysis: Utilize the indicator's settings to backtest trading strategies on historical data, helping to identify the most effective configurations before applying them in live trading.
4.Monitoring Market Conditions
Volatility Awareness: Pay attention to the ATR and ADX readings to understand market volatility and trend strength, adjusting strategies accordingly.
Event Considerations: Be cautious around major economic announcements or events that may impact market behavior beyond technical indications.
Indicator Inputs and Customization Options
Baseline Type and Length: Select from multiple moving average types and specify the period length.
ADX Settings: Adjust the length, smoothing, and threshold for trend strength confirmation.
Volume Filter: Enable or disable the volume confirmation filter.
Higher Timeframe Filter: Choose to incorporate higher timeframe analysis and specify the desired timeframe.
Candlestick Patterns: Enable or disable the detection of candlestick patterns for additional signal confirmation.
SSL Baseline Type and Length: Customize the SSL baseline settings separately from the primary baseline.
Price Action Zones Settings:
Zone Thickness: Adjust the visual thickness of the support and resistance zones.
Lookback Period: Define how far back the indicator looks for pivot points.
ATR Multiplier for Zone Width: Set the multiplier for ATR to determine the dynamic width of the zones.
Maximum Number of Zones: Limit the number of support and resistance zones displayed.
Pivot Bars: Customize the number of bars to the left and right used for identifying pivot highs and lows.
Conclusion
The "Mars Signals - Precision Trend Analyzer with SSL Baseline & Price Action Zones" is a versatile and powerful tool that amalgamates essential technical analysis techniques into a single, user-friendly indicator. By providing clear visual signals and incorporating multiple layers of confirmation, it assists traders in identifying high-probability trading opportunities. Whether you are a day trader, swing trader, or long-term investor, this indicator can be tailored to suit your trading style and enhance your decision-making process.
To maximize the benefits of this indicator:
Understand Each Component: Familiarize yourself with how each part of the indicator contributes to the overall signal generation.
Customize Thoughtfully: Adjust the settings based on the asset class, market conditions, and your risk tolerance.
Practice Diligently: Use demo accounts or paper trading to practice and refine your strategy before deploying it in live markets.
Stay Informed: Continuously educate yourself on technical analysis and market dynamics to make the most informed decisions.
Disclaimer
Trading financial markets involves risk, and past performance is not indicative of future results. This indicator is a tool to aid in analysis and should not be the sole basis for any trading decision. Always conduct your own research and consider consulting with a licensed financial advisor.
Vektorkerzen HighlightThe indicator highlights candles when:
The volume is at least twice the 20-period moving average.
The range (difference between high and low prices) is at least twice the 20-period average range.
[MAD MBS] L3 Float Operations & ML-NormalizersFirst of all:
This indicator is not a standalone tool ; it relies on other script series for its inputs.
This script is an indicator designed for multi-path float operations with integrated machine learning normalizers.
It supports up to four distinct paths, each customizable with multiple sources, factors, and operations.
Users can perform various mathematical operations on price data, including addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, and percentage changes, as well as more advanced tasks like double and triple moving averages or power operations.
The script also integrates several normalization methods (e.g., Min-Max, Z-Score, Robust) to standardize data—an important step for machine learning models.
Each path supports multiple smoothing techniques (e.g., EMA, SMA, and specialized Ehlers smoothers) to further refine the output.
Designed to handle multiple data inputs simultaneously, this tool is especially useful for traders looking to analyze and normalize data from different price sources.
The combination of advanced mathematical operations, normalization techniques, and smoothing enhances data management, aiding in more effective trading decisions.
Here you can see a single path, out of the four possible:
Details to the screenshot:
First Series
Second Series
Option to override the second series with a custom constant (or when normalizing, use the length instead)
The first selection box sets the mathematical operation or activates the normalizer.
The second selection box sets the normalization method.
The third selection box sets the final smoothing technique, followed by parameters for smoothing length.
These settings are repeated identically for Paths 2–4.
At the bottom of the setup, there's a general offset option (add the 'close' price for overlay purposes).
Additionally, there's an option to display a line at zero for centered results.
Point and Figure Displacement IndicatorThe PnF Displacement indicator is my custom script for TradingView, designed to analyze Point and Figure (PnF) charts with displacement features.
Key components of the script include:
User Inputs:
Require FVG: A boolean input to determine if a Fair Value Gap (FVG) is required for displacement calculations.
Displacement Type: Allows users to choose between "Open to Close" and "High to Low" for column range calculations.
Displacement Length: Defines how far back to look for calculating the standard deviation of the column range.
Displacement Strength: Multiplier for the standard deviation to adjust sensitivity.
Box Size: Sets the size of each box in the PnF chart.
Number of Boxes for Minimum Displacement: Specifies how many boxes to consider for calculating the minimum displacement.
Displacement Logic:
The script calculates the column range based on the selected displacement type.
It computes a standard deviation of the candle range and determines a minimum displacement based on user-defined box size and count.
The displacement condition combines the FVG check and the column range against the calculated minimum.
Visual Representation:
The bars are colored based on displacement conditions, enhancing visual analysis on the chart.
This indicator aids traders in identifying significant price movements in PnF charts while incorporating user customization options for better analysis.
PnF Fibonacci Levels with AlertsMy Pine Script indicator, "PnF Fibonacci Levels with Alerts," overlays on a trading chart to generate alerts based on Fibonacci levels in Point and Figure (PnF) charts.
Key Features:
Inputs and Initialization:
It uses a customizable Fibonacci level (set at 0.236) and initializes variables for tracking the high and low of O and X columns.
O Column Logic:
When the current column is identified as an O column (when the close is less than the open), it calculates the Fibonacci level based on the high and low of that column, drawing a line on the chart.
Buy Alert:
If the closing price of the previous bar is above the Fibonacci level of the O column, a buy alert is triggered.
X Column Logic:
If the current column is an X column and the close is above the previous O column's low, it captures the current high and low, calculates the Fibonacci level, and draws it on the chart.
Sell Alert:
A sell alert is triggered if the closing price of the X column is at or below the specified Fibonacci level.
This indicator aids traders by highlighting critical Fibonacci levels and providing timely alerts for potential buy and sell opportunities.