Shamji's Liquidity Sweep + FVG (Follow-up + Filters) Purpose (what it does)
This indicator looks for two related price structures used by many smart-money / liquidity-hunt traders:
Liquidity Sweeps — candles that wick beyond a recent swing high (for buy-side stop-hunts) or swing low (for sell-side stop-hunts), then close back inside. These are flagged as potential stop-hunt events that clear obvious liquidity.
Fair Value Gaps (FVGs) — simple 3-bar style gaps where an older bar’s high is below the current low (bullish FVG) or an older bar’s low is above the current high (bearish FVG). When an FVG appears after a sweep (within a configurable window), this is considered a follow-up alignment.
The script adds optional filters (volume spike and candle-range vs ATR) to increase confidence, and can restrict marking/alerts to only events that meet the follow-up and filter rules.
Candlestick analysis
RSI DivergenceStrat WCredit to faytterro. Buy when RSI is staying flat or going up while the ticker price is going down. Sell when RSI is staying flat or going down while the ticker price is going up.
ICT 369 Sniper MSS Indicator (HTF Bias) - H2LThis script is an ICT (Inner Circle Trader) concept-based trading indicator designed to identify high-probability reversal or continuation setups, primarily focusing on intraday trading using a Higher Timeframe (HTF) directional bias.
Here are the four core components of the indicator:
Higher Timeframe (HTF) Bias Filter (Market Structure Shift - MSS): It determines the overall trend by checking if the current price has broken the most recent high or low swing point of a larger timeframe (e.g., 4H). This establishes a Bullish or Bearish bias, ensuring trades align with the dominant trend.
Fair Value Gap (FVG) and OTE: It identifies price imbalances (FVGs) and calculates the Optimal Trade Entry (OTE) levels (50%, 62%, 70.5%, etc.) within those gaps, looking for price to retrace into these specific areas.
Kill Zones (Timing): It incorporates specific time windows (London and New York Kill Zones, based on NY Time) where institutional trading activity is high, only allowing entry signals during these defined periods.
Signal and Targets: It triggers a Long or Short signal when all criteria are met (HTF Bias, FVG, OTE retracement, and Kill Zone timing). It then calculates and plots suggested trade levels, including a Stop Loss (SL) and three Take Profit targets (TP1, TP2, and a dynamic Runner Target based on the weekly Average True Range or ATR).
In summary, it's a comprehensive tool for traders following ICT principles, automating the confluence check across trend, structure, liquidity, and timing.
Previous Day Close (PDC)pdc price just watch how it reacts it will say if bearish or bullish on day or can get a good entry took a while to make who likes it
Jasons Bullish Reversal DetectorThis bullish reversal detector is designed to spot higher-quality turning points instead of shallow bounces. At its core, it looks for candles closing above the 20-period SMA, a MACD bullish crossover, and RSI strength above 50. On top of that, it layers in “depth” filters: price must reclaim and retest a long-term baseline (like the 200-period VWMA), momentum should confirm with RSI and +DI leading, short-term EMAs need to slope upward, and conditions like overheated ATR or strong downside ADX will block false signals. When all of these align, the script flags a depth-confirmed bullish reversal, aiming to highlight spots where structure, momentum, and volatility all support a sustainable shift upward.
StratNinjaTable - VerticalA Pine Script v6 indicator that displays a vertical table with key The Strat data and supporting metrics.
✦ Table Structure:
Overview:
Ticker – the stock symbol.
TF – the chart’s main timeframe.
MFI – Money Flow Index with selectable timeframe.
ATR – Average True Range with color coding:
Green – below 3%.
Yellow – between 3% and 6%.
Red – above 6%.
Timeframes:
Displayed vertically (5m, 15m, 1H, D, W, M, etc.).
Each shows the current bar type according to The Strat (1, 2U, 2D, 3).
Text color reflects candle direction (green = close above open, red = close below open).
Includes a countdown timer to bar close.
Fundamentals:
Market Cap – in billions.
Sector – stock sector.
SMA20 Δ – distance from the 20-period SMA (in %).
Avg Volume (30d) – average 30-day volume (in millions).
✦ Adjustments Made:
Removed the Strat Pattern section completely.
Removed the DIR column – direction is now represented by Strat cell text color.
Reordered Overview section: Ticker → TF → MFI → ATR.
ATR now has three levels of coloring (Green/Yellow/Red) for >3% and >6%
卡蛋K线反转Currently, only entry signals and reversal signals are available.
Continuous updates are planned, with subsequent plans to add alarm and reversal alerts.
Pattern Match & Forward Projection – Weekly (EN)
Overview
This indicator searches for recurring price patterns in weekly data and projects their average forward performance.
The logic is based on historical pattern repetition: it scans past price sequences similar to the most recent one, then aggregates their forward returns to estimate potential outcomes.
⚠️ Important: The indicator is designed for weekly timeframe only. Using it on daily or intraday charts will trigger an error message.
Settings (Inputs)
Pattern Settings
Pattern length (weeks): Number of weeks used to define the reference pattern.
Forward length (weeks): Number of weeks into the future to evaluate after each pattern match.
Lookback (weeks): Historical window to scan for past pattern matches.
Normalize by shape (z-score): If enabled, patterns are normalized by z-score, focusing on shape similarity rather than absolute values.
Distance threshold (Euclidean): Maximum allowed Euclidean distance between the reference pattern and historical candidates. Smaller values = stricter matching.
Min. required matches: Minimum number of valid matches needed for analysis.
Quality Filters
Min required Hit%: Minimum percentage of positive outcomes (upside forward returns) required for the pattern to be considered valid.
Return filter mode:
Either: absolute average return ≥ threshold
Long only: average return ≥ threshold
Short only: average return ≤ -threshold
Min avg return (%): Minimum average forward return threshold for validation.
Visual Options
Highlight historical matches (labels): Marks where in history similar patterns occurred.
Max match labels to draw: Caps the number of match markers shown to avoid clutter.
Draw average projection: Displays the average projected forward curve if conditions are met.
Show summary panel: Enables/disables the information panel.
Show weekly avg curve in panel: Adds a breakdown of average returns week by week.
Projection color: Choose the color of the projected forward curve.
What the Screen Shows
Summary Panel (top-left by default)
Total matches found in history
Matches with valid forward data
Average, minimum, and maximum distance (similarity measure)
Average forward return and Hit%
Distance threshold and normalization setting
Weekly average forward curve (if enabled)
Quality filter results (pass/fail)
Projection Curve (dotted line on price chart)
Drawn only if enough valid matches are found and filters are satisfied
Represents the average forward performance of historical matches, anchored at the current bar
Historical Match Labels (▲ markers)
Small arrows below past bars where similar patterns occurred
Tooltip: “Historical match”
Forecast Logic
The indicator does not predict the future in a deterministic way.
Instead, it relies on a pattern-matching algorithm:
The most recent N weeks (defined by Pattern length) are taken as the reference.
The algorithm scans the last Lookback (weeks) for segments with similar shape and magnitude.
Similarity is measured using Euclidean distance (optionally z-score normalized).
For each valid match, the subsequent Forward length weeks are collected.
These forward paths are averaged to generate a composite forward projection.
The summary panel reports whether the current setup passes the quality filters (Hit% and minimum average return).
Usage Notes
Best used as a contextual tool, not a standalone trading system.
Works only on weekly timeframe.
Quality filters help distinguish between noisy and statistically meaningful patterns.
A higher number of matches usually improves reliability, but very strict thresholds may reduce sample size.
📊 This tool is useful for traders who want to evaluate how similar historical setups have behaved and to visualize potential forward paths in a statistically aggregated way.
OHLC RTH & Globex SessionsHoD (High of Day)
OoD (Open of Day)
LoD (Low of Day)
CoD (Close of Day)
HoG (High of Globex)
LoG (Low of Globex)
HoY (High of Yesterday)
OoY (Open of Yesterday)
LoY (Low of Yesterday)
CoY (Close of Yesterday)
30-10-3 MAX,min dynamicsSupported timeframes: The script works only on timeframes of 1 minute or lower (including second-based timeframes).
Displayed levels: The highs and lows of the last closed candle are plotted for the 30-minute, 10-minute, and 3-minute timeframes.
Updates: The levels update only when a candle closes in the respective timeframe (e.g., every 30 minutes for the 30m levels).
Visualization: Dashed lines for highs and lows (blue for 30m, green for 10m, red for 3m).
Labels indicating "Max 30m", "Min 30m", etc., positioned above the highs and below the lows.
Period Separator - MTF with Price LevelsPeriod Separator - MTF with Price Levels
A customizable multi-timeframe period separator indicator that displays a user-defined number of vertical lines with corresponding horizontal price levels.
Key Features:
Multi-Timeframe Support: Works with all timeframes from 1-minute to yearly (12M, 3M, M, W, D, 4H, 1H, 15m, 5m, 1m)
Complete Price Level Analysis: Shows horizontal lines for High, Low, 0.75, 0.50, 0.25, and Open levels for all visible periods between vertical separators
Seconds Chart Compatibility: Special 1-minute separator option for seconds timeframes
Full Customization: Independent color, style, and width settings for all lines
Smart Alerts: Optional price break alerts for high/low levels with sound options
Clean Memory Management: Automatically manages line objects to prevent chart clutter
Sliding Window Display: Set exactly how many vertical separator lines to show (1-20), with older lines automatically removed as new periods begin
Perfect for:
Session/period analysis with controlled visual complexity
Support/resistance level identification across multiple periods
Fibonacci-style level trading between defined time periods
Clean chart presentation with limited historical data display
Settings:
Number of Vertical Lines: Controls exactly how many period separators are visible
All price levels can be toggled on/off independently
Comprehensive styling options for professional chart presentation
Ideal for traders who want period-based analysis without overwhelming their charts with too many historical lines.
30-10-3 MAX,min dinamici Supported timeframes: The script works only on timeframes of 1 minute or lower (including second-based timeframes).
Displayed levels: The highs and lows of the last closed candle are plotted for the 30-minute, 10-minute, and 3-minute timeframes.
Updates: The levels update only when a candle closes in the respective timeframe (e.g., every 30 minutes for the 30m levels).
Visualization: Dashed lines for highs and lows (blue for 30m, green for 10m, red for 3m).
Labels indicating "Max 30m", "Min 30m", etc., positioned above the highs and below the lows.
Watermark with Session Boxes (by Rufi)Watermark & Session Boxes - Chart Branding Tool
What it does: Combines professional chart watermarking with automated trading session visualization for clean, branded analysis.
Key Features:
Smart Session Boxes: Auto-draws boxes around Asia (8PM-11:59PM), London (2AM-5AM), and NY (7AM-10AM) sessions using high/low detection
Custom Watermark: Professional text overlay with your brand/tagline
Full Customization: Adjustable colors, transparency (0-100%), and display limits (1-30 days)
How it works: Uses Pine Script's time() function to detect session periods, tracks price extremes during each session, then draws filled rectangles from session high to low. Perfect for identifying key support/resistance levels from major trading periods.
Best for: Intraday traders who want branded charts with clear session-based S/R levels. Ideal for forex, indices, and crypto on lower timeframes.
RSI Crossover with Candlestick Patternsusing the RSI indicator levels 40 and 60, where the signal cuts above level 40 with a candlestick hammer or bull engulfing and cuts below level 60 with a candlestick inverter hammer or bearish engulfing.
2nd 1H: Midpoints (white=2nd mid, blue=2-candle range mid)2nd 1H: Midpoints (white=2nd mid, blue=2-candle range mid)
Opening Range TraderThis indicator, "Opening Range Trader," provides visual tools for defining and tracking two customizable intraday ranges plus today’s open, high, and low. It is designed for day traders to identify support, resistance, and breakout opportunities by automatically marking key price levels that often shape the day's momentum.
It offers:
Customizable start and end times for two independent time ranges.
Toggle options to display lines for the selected ranges and for today’s open, high, and low.
Automatic adaptation for New York market hours.
Real-time updates for session highs/lows and today’s evolving levels.
Traders use this to watch for breakouts above or below the opening range (ORB strategy), to fade false moves when price returns inside the range, or to participate in trending moves after volatility begins. A common setup is entering long on closes above the range high, or short on closes below the range low, with stops and targets based on the range’s width or the opposite boundary.
Risk management approaches include placing stop losses at the midpoint or at the opposite end of the range, and adjusting targets for measured moves. Volume confirmation can help filter valid breakouts, while adapting times for specific assets and trading styles maximizes flexibility.
The second range allows traders to repeat similar strategies later in the session for evolving momentum windows, making this indicator useful for multiple intraday setups.
Clean MA + Signals (overlay)//@version=5
indicator("Clean MA + Signals (overlay)", overlay=true)
// Inputs
maLen = input.int(50, "MA Length", minval=1)
maType = input.string("EMA", "MA Type", options= )
// MA
maCalc(src, len, typ) =>
switch typ
"SMA" => ta.sma(src, len)
"EMA" => ta.ema(src, len)
"RMA" => ta.rma(src, len)
"WMA" => ta.wma(src, len)
maLine = maCalc(close, maLen, maType)
plot(maLine, "MA", color=color.new(color.teal, 0), linewidth=2)
// Siqnallar — yalnız kəsişmə anında
longCond = ta.crossover(close, maLine)
shortCond = ta.crossunder(close, maLine)
plotshape(longCond, "LONG", location=location.belowbar, style=shape.triangleup, color=color.lime, size=size.small, text="LONG")
plotshape(shortCond, "SHORT", location=location.abovebar, style=shape.triangledown, color=color.red, size=size.small, text="SHORT")
alertcondition(longCond, "LONG Signal", "LONG signal on {{ticker}} {{interval}}")
alertcondition(shortCond, "SHORT Signal", "SHORT signal on {{ticker}} {{interval}}")
NY 14:30 High/Low - 1mThis indicator automatically draws horizontal lines for the High (green) and Low (red) of the 14:30 (Lisbon) candle on the 1-minute chart.
It is designed for traders who want to quickly identify the New York open levels (NY Open), allowing you to:
Visualize the NY market opening zone.
Use these levels as intraday support or resistance.
Plan entries and exits based on breakouts or pullbacks.
Features:
Works on any 1-minute chart.
Lines are drawn immediately after the 14:30 candle closes.
Lines extend automatically to the right.
Simple and lightweight, no complex variables or external dependencies.
Daily reset, always showing the current day’s levels.
Recommended Use:
Combine with support/resistance zones, order blocks, or fair value gaps.
Monitor price behavior during the NY open to identify breakout or rejection patterns.
Bullish_1Hour_entry_Indicator with Alertsthis indicator consioders entry basis of EMAs convergence , VWAP & Multitime frame analysis
Candle Range % MarkerHigh/Low Percentage marker. For a Green Candle its low to High. For a Red its from High to Low of the Candle
30m stratDefine a time range, and the indicator will highlight it with a shaded area
This indicator lets you visualize higher timeframe levels while viewing a lower timeframe chart.
FAILED 9Define a time range, and the indicator will highlight it with a shaded area.
The indicator helps you see higher timeframe structure while trading on a lower timeframes
Adaptive Heikin Ashi [CHE]Adaptive Heikin Ashi — volatility-aware HA with fewer fake flips
Summary
Adaptive Heikin Ashi is a volatility-aware reinterpretation of classic Heikin Ashi that continuously adjusts its internal smoothing based on the current ATR regime, which means that in quiet markets the indicator reacts more quickly to genuine directional changes, while in turbulent phases it deliberately increases its smoothing to suppress jitter and color whipsaws, thereby reducing “noise” and cutting down on fake flips without resorting to heavy fixed smoothing that would lag everywhere.
Motivation: why adapt at all?
Classic Heikin Ashi replaces raw OHLC candles with a smoothed construction that averages price and blends each new candle with the previous HA state, which typically cleans up trends and improves visual coherence, yet its fixed smoothing amount treats calm and violent markets the same, leading to the usual dilemma where a setting that looks crisp in a narrow range becomes too nervous in a spike, and a setting that tames high volatility feels unnecessarily sluggish as soon as conditions normalize; by allowing the smoothing weight to expand and contract with volatility, Adaptive HA aims to keep candles readable across shifting regimes without constant manual retuning.
What is different from normal Heikin Ashi?
Fixed vs. adaptive blend:
Classic HA implicitly uses a fixed 50/50 blend for the open update (`HA_open_t = 0.5 HA_open_{t-1} + 0.5 HA_close_{t-1}`), while this script replaces the constant 0.5 with a dynamic weight `w_t` that oscillates around 0.5 as a function of observed volatility, which turns the open update into an EMA-like filter whose “alpha” automatically changes with market conditions.
Volatility as the steering signal:
The script measures volatility via ATR and compares it to a rolling baseline (SMA of ATR over the same length), producing a normalized deviation that is scaled by sensitivity, clamped to ±1 for stability, and then mapped to a bounded weight interval ` `, so the adaptation is strong enough to matter but never runs away.
Outcome that matters to traders:
In high volatility, the weight shifts upward toward the prior HA open, which strengthens smoothing exactly where classic HA tends to “chatter,” while in low volatility the weight shifts downward toward the most recent HA close, which speeds up reaction so quiet trends do not feel artificially delayed; this is the practical mechanism by which noise and fake signals are reduced without accepting blanket lag.
How it works
1. HA close matches classic HA:
`HA_close_t = (Open_t + High_t + Low_t + Close_t) / 4`
2. Volatility normalization:
`ATR_t` is computed over `atr_length`, its baseline is `ATR_SMA_t = SMA(ATR, atr_length)`, and the raw deviation is `(ATR_t / ATR_SMA_t − 1)`, which is then scaled by `adapt_sensitivity` and clamped to ` ` to obtain `v_t`, ensuring that pathological spikes cannot destabilize the weighting.
3. Adaptive weight around 0.5:
`w_t = 0.5 + oscillation_range v_t`, giving `w_t ∈ `, so with a default `range = 0.20` the weight stays between 0.30 and 0.70, which is wide enough to matter but narrow enough to preserve HA identity.
4. EMA-like open update:
On the very first bar the open is seeded from a stable combination of the raw open and close, and thereafter the update is
`HA_open_t = w_t HA_open_{t−1} + (1 − w_t) HA_close_{t−1}`,
which is equivalent to an EMA where higher `w_t` means heavier inertia (more smoothing) and lower `w_t` means stronger pull to the latest price information (more responsiveness).
5. High and low follow classic HA composition:
`HA_high_t = max(High_t, max(HA_open_t, HA_close_t))`,
`HA_low_t = min(Low_t, min(HA_open_t, HA_close_t))`,
thereby keeping visual semantics consistent with standard HA so that your existing reading of bodies, wicks, and transitions still applies.
Why this reduces noise and fake signals in practice
Fake flips in HA typically occur when a fixed blending rule is forced to process candles during a volatility surge, producing rapid alternations around pivots or within wide intrabar ranges; by increasing smoothing exactly when ATR jumps relative to its baseline, the adaptive open stabilizes the candle body progression and suppresses transient color changes, while in the opposite scenario of compressed ranges, the reduced smoothing allows small but persistent directional pressure to reflect in candle color earlier, which reduces the tendency to enter late after multiple slow transitions.
Parameter guide (what each input really does)
ATR Length (default 14): controls both the ATR and its baseline window, where longer values dampen the adaptation by making the baseline slower and the deviation smaller, which is helpful for noisy lower timeframes, while shorter values make the regime detector more reactive.
Oscillation Range (default 0.20): sets the maximum distance from 0.5 that the weight may travel, so increasing it towards 0.25–0.30 yields stronger smoothing in turbulence and faster response in calm periods, whereas decreasing it to 0.10–0.15 keeps the behavior closer to classical HA and is useful if your strategy already includes heavy downstream smoothing.
Adapt Sensitivity (default 6.0): multiplies the normalized ATR deviation before clamping, such that higher sensitivity accelerates adaptation to regime shifts, while lower sensitivity produces gradual transitions; negative values intentionally invert the mapping (higher vol → less smoothing) and are generally not recommended unless you are testing a counter-intuitive hypothesis.
Reading the candles and the optional diagnostic
You interpret colors and bodies just like with normal HA, but you can additionally enable the Adaptive Weight diagnostic plot to see the regime in real time, where values drifting up toward the upper bound indicate a turbulent context that is being deliberately smoothed, and values gliding down toward the lower bound indicate a calm environment in which the indicator chooses to move faster, which can be valuable for discretionary confirmation when deciding whether a fresh color shift is likely to stick.
Practical workflows and combinations
Trend-following entries: use color continuity and body expansion as usual, but expect fewer spurious alternations around news spikes or into liquidity gaps; pairing with structure (swing highs/lows, breaks of internal ranges) keeps entries disciplined.
Exit management: when the diagnostic weight remains elevated for an extended period, you can be stricter with exit triggers because flips are less likely to be accidental noise; conversely, when the weight is depressed, consider earlier partials since the indicator is intentionally more nimble.
Multi-asset, multi-TF: the adaptation is especially helpful if you rotate instruments with very different vol profiles or hop across timeframes, since you will not need to retune a fixed smoothing parameter every time conditions change.
Behavior, constraints, and performance
The script does not repaint historical bars and uses only past information on closed candles, yet just like any candle-based visualization the current live bar will update until it closes, so you should avoid acting on mid-bar flips without a rule that accounts for bar close; there are no `security()` calls or higher-timeframe lookups, which keeps performance light and execution deterministic, and the clamping of the volatility signal ensures numerical stability even during extreme ATR spikes.
Sensible defaults and quick tuning
Start with the defaults (`ATR 14`, `Range 0.20`, `Sensitivity 6.0`) and observe the weight plot across a few volatile events; if you still see too many flips in turbulence, either raise `Range` to 0.25 or trim `Sensitivity` to 4–5 so that the weight can move high but does not overreact, and if the indicator feels too slow in quiet markets, lower `Range` toward 0.15 or raise `Sensitivity` to 7–8 to bias the weight a bit more aggressively downward when conditions compress.
What this indicator is—and is not
Adaptive Heikin Ashi is a context-aware visualization layer that improves the signal-to-noise ratio and reduces fake flips by modulating smoothing with volatility, but it is not a complete trading system, it does not predict the future, and it should be combined with structure, risk controls, and position management that fit your market and timeframe; always forward-test on your instruments, and remember that even adaptive smoothing can delay recognition at sharp turning points when volatility remains elevated.
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






















