Mayer Multiple @ Current PriceThough this script is by me, the original idea comes from a podcast I heard where Trace Mayer talks about how he does crypto valuation. It is based on current price against the 200 day moving average. This indicator script will simply plot that value as a label overlayed on your trading view chart. Best long term results occur when acquiring BTC when the multiple is 2.4 or less. For more info, google "mayer multiple" This script/indicator is strictly for educational purposes. It is not exclusive to bitcoin.
To get the best look out of your charts I make the following changes.
1.Apply the indicator to your chart.
2. In the tools palette of trading view, when looking at a chart, click "Show Objects Tree" the icon displayed above the trash can.
In the objects tree panel, click the preferences icon for "Mayer Multiple @ Current Price"
Switch "scale" to "scale Left"
3. Then for your chart preferences (right click on chart background and select "Properties", and be sure the following are checked on the "Scales" tab
Left Axis
Right Axis
Indicator Last Value
Indicator Labels
Screenshots are not allowed in this view, so I can't post screenshots, but the view above is what it should look like when you are done.
For anyone who wants to see the code, here is the code of the script:
Use at will, and at your own risk.
//@version=3
// Created By Timothy Luce, inspired by Trace Mayer's 200 Day SMA cryptocurrency valuation method
study("Mayer Multiple @ Current Price", overlay=true)
currentPrice = close
currentDay = security(tickerid, "D", sma(close, 200))
mayerMultiple = currentPrice/currentDay
plot(mayerMultiple, color=#00ffaa, transp=100)
If you want to change the color, change this line: #00ffaa
In den Scripts nach "200元+股票大盘" suchen
Multiple Moving AveragesThis is really simple. But useful for me as I don't have a paid account. No-pro users can only use 3 indicators at once and because I rely heavily on simple moving averages it can be a real pain.
This one indicator features:
20 MA
50 MA
100 MA
200 MA
which I find are the most useful overall. The 20 and 50 over all time frame but in particular < 1 day, the 100 and 200 at > 4 hr time frames. In general I don't use the 100 MA that much. The daily 200 MA is a critical support for many assets like stocks and cryptos. I'm by no means a pro and if you are learning I recommend becoming familiar with moving averages right at the beginning.
If you want to deactivate some of the lines, you can do it via the indicator's settings icon.
Yuthavithi Kana with S/R StrategyI have got the idea from this page iwongsakorn.com and wrote my own kana scalper. This strategy draws 3 200 ATR level along side with the sma. It uses 200 ema as trend. Once the price approaches the 20 ema. it will place orders according to trend and take profit and stop loss quickly using the 200 ATR lines.
This is a quick scalper strategy with winrate over 50%
Golden/Death Cross with SMAGolden Cross: Triggered when the 50 SMA crosses above the 200 SMA.
Death Cross: Triggered when the 50 SMA crosses below the 200 SMA.
Multi EMA and Key Levels IndicatorKey Features:
Daily and Previous Day Levels
Plots today’s high and low.
Plots the previous day’s high (Y HOD) and low (Y LOD), with labels anchored to the price axis.
Premarket (Globex) High and Low
Tracks premarket session highs and lows (defined as 5:00 PM to 8:30 AM Chicago time).
Updates dynamically during the session and plots “GLOBEX HIGH” and “GLOBEX LOW” lines with labels.
Exponential & Simple Moving Averages
User can select 3 EMAs (default 8, 21, 200).
Plots EMAs with distinct colors.
Plots the 200-day SMA for longer-term trend context.
200WMA Overlay + Z (heatmap mapping)This script enhances the classic 200-week moving average (200WMA), a long-term market reference line, by adding Z-Score mapping and optional helper bands for extended cycle analysis.
Features
200WMA Anchor: Plots the true 200-week simple moving average on any chart, a widely followed metric for long-term Bitcoin and crypto cycles.
Helper Multiples: Optional overlay of key historical ratios (×0.625, ×1.6, ×2.0, ×2.5) often referenced as cycle support/resistance zones.
Z-Score Mapping: Translates the ratio of price to 200WMA into a Z-Score scale (from +2.5 to –2.5), offering a statistical perspective on whether the market is undervalued, neutral, or overheated relative to its long-term mean.
On-Chart Label: Current Z-Score displayed directly on the last bar for quick reference.
How to Use
Long-Term Valuation: The 200WMA serves as a “fair value” baseline; large deviations highlight extended phases of market sentiment.
Heatmap Context:
Positive Z values typically mark undervaluation or favorable accumulation zones.
Negative Z values highlight overvaluation or profit-taking / distribution zones.
Strategic View: Best used to contextualize long-term market cycles, not for short-term signals.
Confluence Approach: This indicator should not be used alone — combine it with other technical or fundamental tools for stronger decision-making.
Originality
Unlike a basic 200WMA overlay, this version:
Incorporates multi-band ratios for extended cycle mapping.
Introduces a custom Z-Score scale tied directly to price/WMA ratios.
Provides both visual structure and statistical interpretation on a single overlay.
Kaspareit VCP + TTM Squeeze ProKaspareit VCP + TTM Squeeze Pro
A combined tool for identifying volatility contractions and breakout setups. The VCP module (Volatility Contraction Pattern) detects contraction phases under trend filters, while the TTM Squeeze module evaluates compression via Bollinger Bands vs. Keltner Channels and adds a momentum oscillator. The result: clearly marked setup phases, pivot zones, and breakout signals.
What the indicator does
Detects potential VCP setups through falling ATR/True Range relative to the recent minimum, combined with a 3-step EMA trend filter.
Fixes a pivot zone above price to act as breakout reference.
Classifies TTM Squeeze compression levels in 4 colors and checks momentum.
Plots VCP potential (yellow dots), active breakouts (green dots), EMAs, pivot level, momentum histogram, and squeeze status.
Logic explained (simplified)
EMA trend filter (3-step): Close must be above EMA 50/100/200, and EMAs must be properly aligned. Only then VCP signals are valid.
VCP contraction: Current ATR compared to the lowest ATR over VCP period with tolerance factor. If volatility is sufficiently low, contraction is valid.
VCP timer: After a valid VCP, a window ( Max days after VCP ) remains active for breakout evaluation.
Pivot zone: Highest high of last Pivot lookback bars is fixed as Pivot level (red line).
Squeeze classification: Bollinger Band width vs. Keltner Channels gives 4 states: Green = no squeeze, Black = low, Red = mid, Orange = high.
Momentum: Regression-based oscillator evaluates directional impulse relative to smoothed price range.
Breakout: Valid if within active VCP window, close > pivot, EMA filter true, squeeze green, volume > previous bar, momentum > 0. Then Breakout active is marked.
Exit logic: Breakout state ends if volume < short-term average and True Range < short-term average.
Visualization & legend
EMA Short/Mid/Long: 3 lines for trend filter.
Pivot level: Red line, breakout threshold.
VCP potential: Yellow dots below candles when VCP criteria + (Momentum < 0 or Squeeze ≠ green).
Breakout active: Green dots below candles while breakout conditions hold.
Momentum histogram: Columns above chart edge if momentum > 0.
Squeeze status: Colored dots at 0-line: Orange = high, Red = mid, Black = low, Green = no squeeze.
Inputs (settings) and meaning
VCP inputs
VCP period (default 30): Window to detect ATR minimum. Larger = stricter, fewer signals.
Pivot resistance (lookback) (default 10): Bars used to fix pivot high. Lower = earlier, more sensitive levels.
Volatility tolerance (default 1.1): Factor above ATR minimum still considered “contraction.” Lower = stricter.
Volume comparison (Exit) (default 5): Length of average volume for breakout exit.
True Range comparison (Exit) (default 5): Length of TR average for breakout exit.
Max days after VCP (default 50): Time window for breakout after VCP.
EMA short/mid/long (default 50/100/200): Trend filter. Longer = smoother, fewer signals.
TTM Squeeze inputs
TTM Squeeze length (default 20): Base length for BB/KC.
Bollinger Band STD Multiplier (default 2.0): Width of BB. Higher = wider, fewer squeezes.
Keltner Channel #1/#2/#3 (default 1.5/2.0/3.0): Channel widths for low/mid/high squeeze classification.
Practical usage
Setup phase: Watch for aligned EMAs with price above all EMAs. Yellow dots = VCP potential, especially valuable if squeeze is red/orange.
Pivot observation: Red pivot level = breakout threshold.
Breakout trigger: Close above pivot, squeeze green, positive momentum, volume > previous bar → Breakout active .
Monitoring: Breakout state ends if volume and TR fall below short-term averages. This is a signal of weakening momentum , not an order exit rule.
Timeframes & markets: Works on all TFs with reliable data. Daily and H4 work well for trending stocks. For FX/CFDs, volume is tick volume.
Important notes & limitations
This is an indicator , not a strategy. It does not place orders or backtest results.
Pivot level and VCP state recalculate per bar. Pivot may move if new highs form.
Momentum histogram is scaled relative to recent range, not comparable across markets.
Squeeze colors are state labels, not trade signals. Always combine with trend filter.
No alerts included. You may add alertcondition if needed. Logic provides clear states (VCP potential, breakout active, squeeze status).
Tuning tips
See more contractions: Lower TTM length (e.g. 14–18), increase BB Mult slightly, or reduce KC Mult .
Stricter filter: Increase VCP period , lower Volatility tolerance , use longer EMAs.
Earlier breakouts: Reduce Pivot lookback , but risk more false signals.
Credits & license
VCP components: © Kaspareit-Trading.
TTM Squeeze components based on “Beardy Squeeze Pro” © Beardy_Fred.
TTM Squeeze code licensed under Mozilla Public License 2.0. License: mozilla.org
Disclaimer
This indicator is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not investment advice. Trading involves significant risk. Always test on demo accounts and use proper risk management.
Author’s notes
For questions or feedback, please send a private TradingView message with your username.
Médias Móveis - O Caminhos das CriptosMoving Average Indicator: MA 200, EMA 200, EMA 100, EMA 50, and EMA 20
This indicator simultaneously displays five essential moving averages for technical analysis.
Indicador Médias Móveis MA e EMAs - O Caminho das CriptosMoving Average Indicator: MA 200, EMA 200, EMA 100, EMA 50, and EMA 20
This indicator simultaneously displays five essential moving averages for technical analysis.
Indicador Médias Móveis MA e EMA - Caminho das CriptosMoving Average Indicator: MA 200, EMA 200, EMA 100, EMA 50, and EMA 20
This indicator simultaneously displays five essential moving averages for technical analysis.
Volume Candle Rings [CHE]Volume Candle Rings – Spot Volume Extremes Fast 🔍
Marks exceptionally high volume right on the candle as concentric rings. Instantly see how extreme the spike is (levels 1–10), where it happens (anchor on HL2/Close/BodyMid), and how big it is relative to volatility (ATR-scaled). No magic, no blind signals—just clean context for better decisions.
Why it helps 🎯
Catch true extremes: Positive-side Z-Score maps spikes into 10 levels. By default, only 8/9/10 show—the ones that matter.
Context over clutter: Rings sit on the candle, scale with ATR (market regime), and widen in bars (time). Read absorption, breakout thrusts, or capitulation in context.
Signal the new, not the noise: Optional OFF→ON only drawing cuts chart noise and highlights fresh events.
How it works ⚙️
Z-Score: `z = (Vol – SMA(Vol, lookback)) / StDev(Vol, lookback)` → clipped at `zScoreCap`, normalized, and binned to 1..10 (0 = none). Only z > 0 counts.
Geometry: Vertical diameter = `Level × ATR(atrLength) × atrPerLevel`; horizontal radius = `Level × xBarsPerLevel` bars; curvatureFactor controls roundness.
Anchor: Choose HL2, Close, or BodyMid for the vertical center.
Performance: Keeps up to maxStoredCircles; FIFO cleanup to stay smooth.
Typical use cases 📈
Breakout confirmation: Clusters of 8–10 at range edges → rising initiative.
Absorption / fade: Extreme ring (9–10) without follow-through → potential stall or reversal.
Blow-off / climax: Single huge ring after a long run → higher odds of mean reversion.
News filtering: Show the real outliers, not every minor bump.
Inputs (mapped 1:1) 🧩
Z-Score & Levels
Lookback (SMA/StDev) – default 200
Z-Score Clipping – default 5.0
Behavior
Draw every bar – default ON; OFF = only on OFF→ON switches
Max circles to retain – default 120
Anchoring & Geometry
Anchor on candle – HL2 / Close / BodyMid
ATR Length – default 50
ATR per Level (Y) – default 0.25
Bars per Level (X) – default 0.15
Circle curvature – default 0.70
Level Selection (1–10)
Default: 8/9/10 ON, 1–7 OFF. Colors grade from teal/green → orange → red; fill opacity separate.
Quick presets ⏱️
Intraday (1–5m): Lookback 150–250, Cap 4.0–5.0, ATR/Level 0.20–0.30, Bars/Level 0.10–0.20, Draw every bar OFF.
Swing (1H–1D): Lookback 200–300, Cap 5.0, ATR/Level 0.25–0.35, Bars/Level 0.15–0.25, keep 8–10.
Aggressive scouting: Also enable Level 7 for early accumulation.
Pro tips 💡
Control object load: Reduce maxStoredCircles or switch Draw every bar OFF on busy charts.
Seek confluence: Combine rings with S/R, range edges, VWAP, session H/L. A ring is information, not an entry by itself.
Color discipline: Reserve red (9/10) for true extremes; keep lower levels subtle.
Limits & notes 🧭
This is visualization, not alerts or auto signals.
Many polylines can slow charts—tune Behavior settings.
Works across markets/timeframes; adapt parameters to the asset’s character.
Who it’s for 🙌
Traders who read volume in price context—breakouts, fades, reversals. See when the market is truly stepping on the gas.
Volume Candle Rings \ turns raw volume into precise, scale-aware markers. Spot extremes faster, avoid confusing “loud” with “important,” and make cleaner, context-driven decisions. 🚀
Disclaimer
The content provided, including all code and materials, is strictly for educational and informational purposes only. It is not intended as, and should not be interpreted as, financial advice, a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument, or an offer of any financial product or service. All strategies, tools, and examples discussed are provided for illustrative purposes to demonstrate coding techniques and the functionality of Pine Script within a trading context.
Any results from strategies or tools provided are hypothetical, and past performance is not indicative of future results. Trading and investing involve high risk, including the potential loss of principal, and may not be suitable for all individuals. Before making any trading decisions, please consult with a qualified financial professional to understand the risks involved.
By using this script, you acknowledge and agree that any trading decisions are made solely at your discretion and risk.
Best regards and happy trading
Chervolino
EMA Cross 99//@version=6
indicator("EMA Strategie (Indikator mit Entry/TP/SL)", overlay=true, max_lines_count=500, max_labels_count=500)
// === Inputs ===
rrRatio = input.float(3.0, "Risk:Reward (TP/SL)", minval=1.0, step=0.5)
sess = input.session("0700-1900", "Trading Session (lokal)")
// === EMAs ===
ema9 = ta.ema(close, 9)
ema50 = ta.ema(close, 50)
ema200 = ta.ema(close, 200)
// === Session ===
inSession = not na(time(timeframe.period, sess))
// === Trend + Cross ===
bullTrend = (ema9 > ema200) and (ema50 > ema200)
bearTrend = (ema9 < ema200) and (ema50 < ema200)
crossUp = ta.crossover(ema9, ema50)
crossDown = ta.crossunder(ema9, ema50)
// === Pullback Confirm ===
longTouch = bullTrend and crossUp and (low <= ema9)
longConfirm = longTouch and (close > open) and (close > ema9)
shortTouch = bearTrend and crossDown and (high >= ema9)
shortConfirm = shortTouch and (close < open) and (close < ema9)
// === Entry Signale ===
longEntry = longConfirm and inSession
shortEntry = shortConfirm and inSession
// === SL & TP Berechnung ===
longSL = ema50
longTP = close + (close - longSL) * rrRatio
shortSL = ema50
shortTP = close - (shortSL - close) * rrRatio
// === Long Markierungen ===
if (longEntry)
// Entry
line.new(bar_index, close, bar_index+20, close, color=color.green, style=line.style_dotted, width=2)
label.new(bar_index, close, "Entry", style=label.style_label_left, color=color.green, textcolor=color.white, size=size.tiny)
// TP
line.new(bar_index, longTP, bar_index+20, longTP, color=color.green, style=line.style_solid, width=2)
label.new(bar_index, longTP, "TP", style=label.style_label_left, color=color.green, textcolor=color.white, size=size.tiny)
// SL
line.new(bar_index, longSL, bar_index+20, longSL, color=color.red, style=line.style_solid, width=2)
label.new(bar_index, longSL, "SL", style=label.style_label_left, color=color.red, textcolor=color.white, size=size.tiny)
// === Short Markierungen ===
if (shortEntry)
// Entry
line.new(bar_index, close, bar_index+20, close, color=color.red, style=line.style_dotted, width=2)
label.new(bar_index, close, "Entry", style=label.style_label_left, color=color.red, textcolor=color.white, size=size.tiny)
// TP
line.new(bar_index, shortTP, bar_index+20, shortTP, color=color.red, style=line.style_solid, width=2)
label.new(bar_index, shortTP, "TP", style=label.style_label_left, color=color.red, textcolor=color.white, size=size.tiny)
// SL
line.new(bar_index, shortSL, bar_index+20, shortSL, color=color.green, style=line.style_solid, width=2)
label.new(bar_index, shortSL, "SL", style=label.style_label_left, color=color.green, textcolor=color.white, size=size.tiny)
// === EMAs anzeigen ===
plot(ema9, "EMA 9", color=color.yellow, linewidth=1)
plot(ema50, "EMA 50", color=color.orange, linewidth=1)
plot(ema200, "EMA 200", color=color.blue, linewidth=1)
// === Alerts ===
alertcondition(longEntry, title="Long Entry", message="EMA Strategie: LONG Einstiegssignal")
alertcondition(shortEntry, title="Short Entry", message="EMA Strategie: SHORT Einstiegssignal")
BIST30 % Above Moving Average (Breadth)
BIST30 % Above Moving Average (Breadth)
This indicator shows the percentage of BIST30 stocks trading above a selected moving average.
It is a market breadth tool, designed to measure the overall health and participation of the market.
How it works
By default, it uses the 50-day SMA.
You can switch between SMA/EMA and choose different periods (5 / 20 / 50 / 200).
The script checks each BIST30 stock individually and counts how many are closing above the chosen MA.
Interpretation
Above 80% → Overbought zone (short-term correction likely).
Below 20% → Oversold zone (potential rebound).
Around 50% → Neutral / indecisive market.
If the index (BIST:XU030) rises while this indicator falls → the rally is narrow-based, led by only a few stocks (a warning sign).
Use cases
Short-term traders → Use MA=5 or 20 for momentum signals.
Swing / Medium-term investors → Use MA=50 for market health.
Long-term investors → Use MA=200 to track bull/bear market cycles.
Notes
This script covers only BIST30 stocks by default.
The list can be updated for BIST100 or specific sectors (e.g., banks, industrials).
Breadth indicators should not be used as standalone buy/sell signals — combine them with price action, volume, and other technical tools for confirmation.
Profit Filter RSI+MACD//@version=5
indicator("Profit Filter RSI+MACD", overlay=true)
// Trend filter
ema200 = ta.ema(close, 200)
// RSI
rsi = ta.rsi(close, 14)
// MACD
macd = ta.ema(close,12) - ta.ema(close,26)
signal = ta.ema(macd,9)
// Long signal
longCond = close > ema200 and rsi < 30 and ta.crossover(macd, signal)
// Short signal
shortCond = close < ema200 and rsi > 70 and ta.crossunder(macd, signal)
// Plot signals
plotshape(longCond, title="Long Entry", location=location.belowbar,
color=color.green, style=shape.labelup, text="LONG")
plotshape(shortCond, title="Short Entry", location=location.abovebar,
color=color.red, style=shape.labeldown, text="SHORT")
// Plot EMA
plot(ema200, "EMA 200", color=color.orange)
EMRVA//@version=5
indicator("EMRVA", overlay=true)
// === الإعدادات ===
emaLength = input.int(200, "EMA Length")
rsiLength = input.int(14, "RSI Length")
volLength = input.int(20, "Volume MA Length")
adxLength = input.int(14, "ADX Length")
adxFilter = input.int(20, "ADX Minimum Value") // فلتر الاتجاه
// === EMA200 ===
ema200 = ta.ema(close, emaLength)
plot(ema200, color=color.orange, linewidth=2, title="EMA 200")
// === MACD ===
macdLine = ta.ema(close, 12) - ta.ema(close, 26)
signalLine = ta.ema(macdLine, 9)
// === RSI ===
rsi = ta.rsi(close, rsiLength)
// === Volume Confirmation ===
volMA = ta.sma(volume, volLength)
volCond = volume > volMA
// === ADX Manual Calculation ===
upMove = high - high
downMove = low - low
plusDM = na(upMove) ? na : (upMove > downMove and upMove > 0 ? upMove : 0)
minusDM = na(downMove) ? na : (downMove > upMove and downMove > 0 ? downMove : 0)
tr = ta.rma(ta.tr, adxLength)
plusDI = 100 * ta.rma(plusDM, adxLength) / tr
minusDI = 100 * ta.rma(minusDM, adxLength) / tr
dx = 100 * math.abs(plusDI - minusDI) / (plusDI + minusDI)
adx = ta.rma(dx, adxLength)
adxCond = adx > adxFilter
// === شروط الدخول والخروج ===
longCond = close > ema200 and macdLine > signalLine and rsi > 50 and volCond and adxCond
shortCond = close < ema200 and macdLine < signalLine and rsi < 50 and volCond and adxCond
// === منطق الإشارة عند بداية الاتجاه فقط ===
var inLong = false
var inShort = false
buySignal = longCond and not inLong
sellSignal = shortCond and not inShort
if buySignal
inLong := true
inShort := false
if sellSignal
inShort := true
inLong := false
// === إشارات ثابتة ===
plotshape(buySignal, title="Buy Signal", location=location.belowbar,
color=color.green, style=shape.labelup, text="BUY")
plotshape(sellSignal, title="Sell Signal", location=location.abovebar,
color=color.red, style=shape.labeldown, text="SELL")
// === تنبيهات ===
alertcondition(buySignal, title="Buy Alert", message="📈 إشارة شراء مؤكدة مع فلتر ADX")
alertcondition(sellSignal, title="Sell Alert", message="📉 إشارة بيع مؤكدة مع فلتر ADX")
// === رسم ADX للتأكيد ===
plot(adx, title="ADX", color=color.blue)
hline(adxFilter, "ADX Filter", color=color.red)
Parametric Multiplier Backtester🧪 An experimental educational tool for visual market analysis and idea testing through the multiplication and interaction of core technical parameters. It allows you to observe in real time how the combination of indicators affects the resulting curve and the potential efficiency of trading strategies.
📖 Detailed Description
1. Philosophy & Purpose of the Tool
This backtester is not created to search for the “Holy Grail,” but for deep learning and analysis. It is intended for:
👶 Beginner traders – to visually understand how basic indicators work and interact with each other.
🧠 Experienced analysts – to search for new ideas and non-obvious relationships between different aspects of the market (trend, volatility, momentum, volume).
The core idea is combining parameters through multiplication.
👉 Why multiplication? Unlike simple addition, multiplication strengthens signals only when several factors align in the same direction. If at least one parameter shows weakness (close to zero in normalized form), it suppresses the overall result, serving as a filter for false signals.
2. How does it work?
Step 1: Parameter Selection
The tool gathers data from 9 popular indicators: 📈 Price, RSI, ADX, Momentum, ROC, ATR, Volume, Acceleration, Slope.
Step 2: Normalization
Since these indicators differ in nature and scale (e.g., RSI from 0–100 vs ATR in points), they are brought to a unified range. Each parameter is normalized within a given period (Normalization Period). This is the key step for proper functioning.
Step 3: Multiplication
The parameters enabled by the user are multiplied, creating a new derived value — Product Line. This line is an aggregated reflection of the selected market model.
Step 4: Smoothing
The resulting line can be noisy. The Smooth Product Line function (via SMA) reduces noise and highlights the main trend.
Step 5: Interpretation
The smoothed Product Line is compared with its own moving average (Mean Line). Crossovers generate trading signals.
3. What conclusions can be drawn from multiplying parameters?
⚡ RSI × Momentum × Volume – Strength of momentum confirmed by volume. High values may indicate strong, volume-backed moves.
📊 ADX × ATR – Strength of trend and its volatility. High values may signal the beginning of a strong trending move with high volatility.
🚀 Price × Slope × Acceleration – Combined speed and acceleration of the trend. Shows not only where price is going, but with what acceleration.
❌ Disabling parameters – By turning parameters on/off (e.g., Volume), you can instantly see how important each factor is for the current market situation.
4. Real-Time Mode & Instant Feedback
The main educational value of this tool is interactivity:
🔄 Turn indicators on/off in real time.
⏱ Change their periods and instantly observe how the Product Line shape and behavior changes.
📉 Immediately see how these changes affect historical trading signals (blue/red arrows) and strategy performance metrics (Profit Factor, Net Profit, etc.).
This process develops “market intuition” and helps understand which settings work better under different conditions (trend vs range).
5. Default Settings & Recommendations
⚙️ Default settings are optimized for demonstration on the 4H timeframe of the SOLUSDT crypto pair.
Parameter Settings: Switch group (Use RSI, Use ADX, etc.).
Normalization Period (20): Lower = more sensitive, Higher = smoother.
Smooth Product Line (true): Enabled by default for clarity.
Smoothing Period (200): Main sensitivity setting.
Trend Filter: Optional 200-SMA filter. Strategy trades only in the main trend direction.
⚠️ Important Warning: This is an experimental & educational tool. The signals it generates are the result of a mathematical model and are not a ready-to-use trading strategy. Always backtest ideas and apply risk management before risking real money.
EMRV101//@version=5
indicator("EMA200 + MACD + RSI + Volume Confirmation + Alerts", overlay=true)
// === الإعدادات ===
emaLength = input.int(200, "EMA Length")
rsiLength = input.int(14, "RSI Length")
volLength = input.int(20, "Volume MA Length")
// === EMA200 ===
ema200 = ta.ema(close, emaLength)
plot(ema200, color=color.orange, linewidth=2, title="EMA 200")
// === MACD ===
macdLine = ta.ema(close, 12) - ta.ema(close, 26)
signalLine = ta.ema(macdLine, 9)
// === RSI ===
rsi = ta.rsi(close, rsiLength)
// === Volume Confirmation ===
volMA = ta.sma(volume, volLength)
volCond = volume > volMA
// === شروط الدخول والخروج ===
longCond = close > ema200 and macdLine > signalLine and rsi > 50 and volCond
shortCond = close < ema200 and macdLine < signalLine and rsi < 50 and volCond
// === منطق الإشارة عند بداية الاتجاه فقط ===
var inLong = false
var inShort = false
buySignal = longCond and not inLong
sellSignal = shortCond and not inShort
if buySignal
inLong := true
inShort := false
if sellSignal
inShort := true
inLong := false
// === إشارات ثابتة ===
plotshape(buySignal, title="Buy Signal", location=location.belowbar,
color=color.green, style=shape.labelup, text="BUY")
plotshape(sellSignal, title="Sell Signal", location=location.abovebar,
color=color.red, style=shape.labeldown, text="SELL")
// === تنبيهات ===
alertcondition(buySignal, title="Buy Alert", message="📈 إشارة شراء مؤكدة")
alertcondition(sellSignal, title="Sell Alert", message="📉 إشارة بيع مؤكدة")
SMA Cross 5/50 with Trend Filter & Risk Management by JuggiDThe basic SMA (5/50) crossover strategy can be enhanced to improve profitability by adding filters and risk management. For example, a long entry is triggered only when the fast SMA (5) crosses above the slow SMA (50) **and** the price is above the SMA (200), ensuring trades align with the major trend. Similarly, a short entry requires the crossover confirmation plus the price staying below the SMA (200). To reduce false signals and protect capital, stop-loss and take-profit levels can be set automatically (e.g., 2% loss, 5% gain), while additional confirmation tools such as volume spikes, RSI above 50, or MACD momentum can be applied to validate stronger signals. This approach helps avoid whipsaws in sideways markets and allows trades to capture larger moves while minimizing downside risk.
Wickless Heikin Ashi B/S [CHE]Wickless Heikin Ashi B/S \
Purpose.
Wickless Heikin Ashi B/S \ is built to surface only the cleanest momentum turns: it prints a Buy (B) when a bullish Heikin-Ashi candle forms with virtually no lower wick, and a Sell (S) when a bearish Heikin-Ashi candle forms with no upper wick. Optional Lock mode turns these into one-shot signals that hold the regime (bull or bear) until the opposite side appears. The tool can also project dashed horizontal lines from each signal’s price level to help you manage entries, stops, and partial take-profits visually.
How it works.
The indicator computes standard Heikin-Ashi values from your chart’s OHLC. A bar qualifies as bullish if its HA close is at or above its HA open; bearish if below. Then the wick on the relevant side is compared to the bar’s HA range. If that wick is smaller than your selected percentage threshold (plus a tiny tick epsilon to avoid rounding noise), the raw condition is considered “wickless.” Only one side can fire; on the rare occasion both raw conditions would overlap, the bar is ignored to prevent false dual triggers. When Lock is enabled, the first valid signal sets the active regime (background shaded light green for bull, light red for bear) and suppresses further same-side triggers until the opposite side appears, which helps reduce overtrading in chop.
Why wickless?
A missing wick on the “wrong” side of a Heikin-Ashi candle is a strong hint of persistent directional pressure. In practice, this filters out hesitation bars and many mid-bar flips. Traders who prefer entering only when momentum is decisive will find wickless bars useful for timing entries within an established bias.
Visuals you get.
When a valid buy appears, a small triangle “B” is plotted below the bar and a green dashed line can extend to the right from the signal’s HA open price. For sells, a triangle “S” above the bar and a red dashed line do the same. These lines act like immediate, price-anchored references for stop placement and profit scaling; you can shift the anchor left by a chosen number of bars if you prefer the line to start a little earlier for visual alignment.
How to trade it
Establish context first.
Pick a timeframe that matches your style: intraday index or crypto traders often use 5–60 minutes; swing traders might prefer 2–4 hours or daily. The tool is agnostic, but the cleanest results occur when the market is already trending or attempting a fresh breakout.
Entry.
When a B prints, the simplest rule is to enter long at or just after bar close. A conservative variation is to require price to take out the high of the signal bar in the next bar(s). For S, invert the logic: enter short on or after close, or only if price breaks the signal bar’s low.
Stop-loss.
Place the stop beyond the opposite extreme of the signal HA bar (for B: under the HA low; for S: above the HA high). If you prefer a static reference, use the dashed line level (signal HA open) or an ATR buffer (e.g., 1.0–1.5× ATR(14)). The goal is to give the trade enough room that normal noise does not immediately knock you out, while staying small enough to keep the risk contained.
Take-profit and management.
Two pragmatic approaches work well:
R-multiple scaling. Define your initial risk (distance from entry to stop). Scale out at 1R, 2R, and let a runner go toward 3R+ if structure holds.
Trailing logic. Trail behind a short moving average (e.g., EMA 20) or progressive swing points. Many traders also exit on the opposite signal when Lock flips, especially on faster timeframes.
Position sizing.
Keep risk per trade modest and consistent (e.g., 0.25–1% of account). The indicator improves timing; it does not replace risk control.
Settings guidance
Max lower wick for Bull (%) / Max upper wick for Bear (%).
These control how strict “wickless” must be. Tighter values (0.3–1.0%) yield fewer but cleaner signals and are great for strong trends or low-noise instruments. Looser values (1.5–3.0%) catch more setups in volatile markets but admit more noise. If you notice too many borderline bars triggering during high-volatility sessions, increase these thresholds slightly.
Lock (one-shot until opposite).
Keep Lock ON when you want one decisive signal per leg, reducing noise and signal clusters. Turn it OFF only if your plan intentionally scales into trends with multiple entries.
Extended lines & anchor offset.
Leave lines ON to maintain a visual memory of the last trigger levels. These often behave like near-term support/resistance. The offset simply lets you start that line one or more bars earlier if you prefer the look; it does not change the math.
Colors.
Use distinct bull/bear line colors you can read easily on your theme. The default lime/red scheme is chosen for clarity.
Practical examples
Momentum continuation (long).
Price is above your baseline (e.g., EMA 200). A B prints with a tight lower wick filter. Enter on close; stop under the signal HA low. Price pushes up in the next bars; you scale at 1R, trail the rest with EMA 20, and finally exit when a distant S appears or your trail is hit.
Breakout confirmation (short).
Following a range, price breaks down and prints an S with no upper wick. Enter short as the bar closes or on a subsequent break of the signal bar’s low. If the next bar immediately rejects and prints a bullish HA bar, your stop above the signal HA high limits damage. Otherwise, ride the move, harvesting partials as the red dashed line remains unviolated.
Alerts and automation
Set alerts to “Once Per Bar Close” for stability.
Bull ONE-SHOT fires when a valid buy prints (and Lock allows it).
Bear ONE-SHOT fires for sells analogously.
With Lock enabled, you avoid multiple pings in the same direction during a single leg—useful for webhooks or mobile notifications.
Reliability and limitations
The script calculates from completed bars and does not use higher-timeframe look-ahead or repainting tricks. Heikin-Ashi smoothing can lag turns slightly, which is expected and part of the design. In narrow ranges or whipsaw conditions, signals naturally thin out; if you must trade ranges, either tighten the wick filters and keep Lock ON, or add a trend/volatility filter (e.g., trade B only above EMA 200; S only below). Remember: this is an indicator, not a strategy. If you want exact statistics, port the triggers into a strategy and backtest with your chosen entry, stop, and exit rules.
Final notes
Wickless Heikin Ashi B/S \ is a precision timing tool: it waits for decisive, wickless HA bars, provides optional regime locking to reduce noise, and leaves clear price anchors on your chart for disciplined management. Use it with a simple framework—trend bias, fixed risk, and a straightforward exit plan—and it will keep your execution consistent without cluttering the screen or your decision-making.
Disclaimer: This indicator is for educational use and trade assistance only. It is not financial advice. You alone are responsible for your risk and results.
Enhance your trading precision and confidence with Wickless Heikin Ashi B/S ! 🚀
Happy trading
Chervolino
8 EMA BundleThis indicator plots 8 key Exponential Moving Averages (EMAs) — 5, 8, 13, 20, 34, 50, 100, and 200 — in one script. These EMAs help traders analyze short, medium, and long-term market trends at a glance.
📌 Features:
Short-term EMAs (5, 8, 13, 20) highlight momentum and quick trend changes.
Medium-term EMAs (34, 50) confirm ongoing trends.
Long-term EMAs (100, 200) define the primary trend and major support/resistance.
Suitable for both intraday and swing trading.
This tool simplifies multi-EMA analysis, making it easier to spot crossovers, trend shifts, and pullback opportunities.
Simple Technicals Table📊 Simple Technicals Table
🎯 A comprehensive technical analysis dashboard displaying key pivot points and moving averages across multiple timeframes
📋 OVERVIEW
The Simple Technicals Table is a powerful indicator that organizes essential trading data into a clean, customizable table format. It combines Fibonacci-based pivot points with critical moving averages for both daily and weekly timeframes, giving traders instant access to key support/resistance levels and trend information.
Perfect for:
Technical analysts studying multi-timeframe data
Chart readers needing quick reference levels
Market researchers analyzing price patterns
Educational purposes and data visualization
🚀 KEY FEATURES
📊 Dual Timeframe Analysis
Daily (D1) and Weekly (W1) data side-by-side
Real-time updates as market conditions change
Seamless comparison between timeframes
🎯 Fibonacci Pivot Points
R3, R2, R1 : Resistance levels using Fibonacci ratios (38.2%, 61.8%, 100%)
PP : Central pivot point from previous period's data
S1, S2, S3 : Support levels with same methodology
📈 Complete EMA Suite
EMA 10 : Short-term trend identification
EMA 20 : Popular swing trading reference
EMA 50 : Medium-term trend confirmation
EMA 100 : Institutional support/resistance
EMA 200 : Long-term trend determination
📊 Essential Indicators
RSI 14 : Momentum for overbought/oversold conditions
ATR 14 : Volatility measurement for risk management
🎨 Full Customization
9 table positions : Place anywhere on your chart
5 text sizes : Tiny to huge for optimal visibility
Custom colors : Background, headers, and text
Optional pivot lines : Visual weekly levels on chart
⚙️ HOW IT WORKS
Fibonacci Pivot Calculation:
Pivot Point (PP) = (High + Low + Close) / 3
Range = High - Low
Resistance Levels:
R1 = PP + (Range × 0.382)
R2 = PP + (Range × 0.618)
R3 = PP + (Range × 1.000)
Support Levels:
S1 = PP - (Range × 0.382)
S2 = PP - (Range × 0.618)
S3 = PP - (Range × 1.000)
Smart Price Formatting:
< $1: 5 decimal places (crypto-friendly)
$1-$10: 4 decimal places
$10-$100: 3 decimal places
> $100: 2 decimal places
📊 TECHNICAL ANALYSIS APPLICATIONS
⚠️ EDUCATIONAL PURPOSE ONLY
This indicator is designed solely for technical analysis and educational purposes . It provides data visualization to help understand market structure and price relationships.
📈 Data Analysis Uses
Support & Resistance Identification : Visualize Fibonacci-based pivot levels
Trend Analysis : Study EMA relationships and price positioning
Multi-Timeframe Study : Compare daily and weekly technical data
Market Structure : Understand key technical levels and indicators
📚 Educational Benefits
Learn about Fibonacci pivot point calculations
Understand moving average relationships
Study RSI and ATR indicator values
Practice multi-timeframe technical analysis
🔍 Data Visualization Features
Organized table format for easy data reading
Color-coded levels for quick identification
Real-time technical indicator values
Historical data integrity maintained
🛠️ SETUP GUIDE
1. Installation
Search "Simple Technicals Table" in indicators
Add to chart (appears in middle-left by default)
Table displays automatically on any timeframe
2. Customization
Table Position : Choose from 9 locations
Text Size : Adjust for screen resolution
Colors : Match your chart theme
Pivot Lines : Toggle weekly level visualization
3. Optimization Tips
Use larger text on mobile devices
Dark backgrounds work well with light text
Enable pivot lines for visual reference
✅ BEST PRACTICES
Recommended Usage:
Use for technical analysis and educational study only
Combine with other analytical methods for comprehensive analysis
Study multi-timeframe data relationships
Practice understanding technical indicator values
Important Notes:
Levels based on previous period's data
Most effective in trending markets
No repainting - uses confirmed data only
Works on all instruments and timeframes
🔧 TECHNICAL SPECS
Performance:
Pine Script v5 optimized code
Minimal CPU/memory usage
Real-time data updates
No lookahead bias
Compatibility:
All chart types (Candlestick, Bar, Line)
Any instrument (Stocks, Forex, Crypto, etc.)
All timeframes supported
Mobile and desktop friendly
Data Accuracy:
Precise floating-point calculations
Historical data integrity maintained
No future data leakage
📱 DEVICE SUPPORT
✅ Desktop browsers (Chrome, Firefox, Safari, Edge)
✅ TradingView mobile app (iOS/Android)
✅ TradingView desktop application
✅ Light and dark themes
✅ All screen resolutions
📋 VERSION INFO
Version 1.0 - Initial Release
Fibonacci-based pivot calculations
Dual timeframe support (Daily/Weekly)
Complete EMA suite (10, 20, 50, 100, 200)
RSI and ATR indicators
Fully customizable interface
Optional pivot line visualization
Smart price formatting
Mobile-optimized display
⚠️ DISCLAIMER
This indicator is designed for technical analysis, educational and informational purposes ONLY . It provides data visualization and technical calculations to help users understand market structure and price relationships.
⚠️ NOT FOR TRADING DECISIONS
This tool does NOT provide trading signals or investment advice
All data is for analytical and educational purposes only
Users should not base trading decisions solely on this indicator
Always conduct thorough research and analysis before making any financial decisions
📚 Educational Use Only
Use for learning technical analysis concepts
Study market data and indicator relationships
Practice chart reading and data interpretation
Understand mathematical calculations behind technical indicators
The Simple Technicals Table provides technical data visualization to assist in market analysis education. It does not constitute financial advice, trading recommendations, or investment guidance. Users are solely responsible for their own research and decisions.
Author: ToTrieu
Version: 1.0
Category: Technical Analysis / Support & Resistance
License: Open source for educational use
💬 Questions? Comments? Feel free to reach out!
Multiple Colored Moving AveragesMULTIPLE COLORED MOVING AVERAGES - USER GUIDE
DISCLAIMER
----------
Both the code and this documentation were created heavily using artificial intelligence. I'm lazy...
This indicator was inspired by repo32's "Moving Average Colored EMA/SMA" indicator. *
What is this indicator?
-----------------------
This is a TradingView indicator that displays up to 4 different moving averages on your chart simultaneously. Each moving average can be customized with different calculation methods, colors, and filtering options.
Why would I use multiple moving averages?
-----------------------------------------
- See trend direction across different timeframes at once
- Identify support and resistance levels
- Spot crossover signals between fast and slow MAs
- Reduce false signals with filtering options
- Compare how different MA types react to price action
What moving average types are available?
----------------------------------------
11 different types:
- SMA: Simple average, equal weight to all periods
- EMA: Exponential, more weight to recent prices
- WMA: Weighted, linear weighting toward recent data
- RMA: Running average, smooth like EMA
- DEMA: Double exponential, reduced lag
- TEMA: Triple exponential, even less lag
- HMA: Hull, fast and smooth combination
- VWMA: Volume weighted, includes volume data
- LSMA: Least squares, based on linear regression
- TMA: Triangular, double-smoothed
- ZLEMA: Zero lag exponential, compensated for lag
How do I set up the indicator?
------------------------------
Each MA has these settings:
- Enable/Disable: Turn each MA on or off
- Type: Choose from the 11 calculation methods
- Length: Number of periods (21, 50, 100, 200 are common)
- Smoothing: 0-10 levels of extra smoothing
- Noise Filter: 0-5% to ignore small changes
- Colors: Bullish (rising) and bearish (falling) colors
- Line Width: 1-5 pixels thickness
What does the smoothing feature do?
-----------------------------------
Smoothing applies extra calculations to make the moving average line smoother. Higher levels reduce noise but make the MA respond slower to price changes. Use higher smoothing in choppy markets, lower smoothing in trending markets.
What is the noise filter?
--------------------------
The noise filter ignores small percentage changes in the moving average. For example, a 0.3% filter will ignore any MA movement smaller than 0.3%. This helps eliminate false signals from minor price fluctuations.
When should I use this indicator?
---------------------------------
- Trend analysis: See if market is going up, down, or sideways
- Entry timing: Look for price bounces off MA levels
- Exit signals: Watch for MA slope changes or crossovers
- Support/resistance: MAs often act as dynamic levels
- Multi-timeframe analysis: Use different lengths for different perspectives
What are some good settings to start with?
-------------------------------------------
Conservative approach:
- MA 1: EMA 21 (short-term trend)
- MA 2: SMA 50 (medium-term trend)
- MA 3: SMA 200 (long-term trend)
- Low noise filtering (0.1-0.3%)
Active trading:
- MA 1: HMA 9 (very responsive)
- MA 2: EMA 21 (short-term)
- MA 3: EMA 50 (medium-term)
- Minimal or no smoothing
How do I interpret the colors?
------------------------------
Each MA changes color based on its direction:
- Bullish color: MA is rising (upward trend)
- Bearish color: MA is falling (downward trend)
- Gray: MA is flat or unchanged
What should I look for in crossovers?
-------------------------------------
- Golden Cross: Fast MA crosses above slow MA (bullish signal)
- Death Cross: Fast MA crosses below slow MA (bearish signal)
- Multiple crossovers in same direction can confirm trend changes
- Wait for clear separation between MAs after crossover
How do I use MAs for support and resistance?
---------------------------------------------
- In uptrends: MAs often provide support when price pulls back
- In downtrends: MAs may act as resistance on rallies
- Multiple MAs create support/resistance zones
- Stronger levels where multiple MAs cluster together
Can I use this with other indicators?
-------------------------------------
Yes, it works well with:
- Volume indicators for confirmation
- RSI or MACD for timing entries
- Bollinger Bands for volatility context
- Price action patterns for setup confirmation
What if I get too many signals?
-------------------------------
- Increase smoothing levels
- Raise noise filter percentages
- Use longer MA periods
- Focus on major crossovers only
- Wait for multiple MA confirmation
What if signals are too slow?
-----------------------------
- Reduce smoothing to 0
- Lower noise filter values
- Switch to faster MA types (HMA, ZLEMA, DEMA)
- Use shorter periods
- Focus on the fastest MA only
Which MA types work best in different markets?
----------------------------------------------
Trending markets: EMA, DEMA, TEMA (responsive to trends)
Choppy markets: SMA, TMA, HMA with smoothing (less whipsaws)
High volatility: Use higher smoothing and noise filtering
Low volatility: Use minimal filtering for better responsiveness
Do I need all the advanced features?
------------------------------------
No. Start with basic settings:
- Choose MA type and length
- Set colors you prefer
- Leave smoothing at 0
- Leave noise filter at 0
Add complexity only if needed to improve signal quality.
How do I know if my settings are working?
-----------------------------------------
- Backtest on historical data
- Paper trade the signals first
- Adjust based on market conditions
- Keep a trading journal to track performance
- Be willing to modify settings as markets change
Can I save different configurations?
------------------------------------
Yes, save different indicator templates in TradingView for:
- Different trading styles (scalping, swing trading)
- Different market conditions (trending, ranging)
- Different instruments (stocks, forex, crypto)
Supertrend0913This Pine Script (`@version=6`) combines **two Supertrend indicators** and a set of **moving averages (EMA & MA)** into one overlay chart tool for TradingView.
**Key features:**
* **Supertrend \ & \ :**
* Each has independent ATR period, multiplier, and ATR calculation method.
* Plots trend lines (green/red for \ , blue/yellow for \ ).
* Generates **buy/sell signals** when trend direction changes.
* Includes **alert conditions** for buy, sell, and trend reversals.
* **Moving Averages:**
* 6 EMAs (lengths 21, 55, 100, 200, 300, 400).
* 5 SMAs (lengths 11, 23, 25, 39, 200).
* Each plotted in different colors for trend visualization.
👉 In short: it’s a **combined trading tool** that overlays two configurable Supertrend systems with alerts plus multiple EMAs/SMAs to help identify trend direction, signals, and potential entry/exit points.