Keltner Channel v2 - Auto highlighting of Bull/Bear trendsPlease do not use the previous version (), I was using wrong colors for Bull/Bear there.
All options configurable.
Reversals are marked using crosses. as well as highlighted using green/red color (depending on bull/bear). Enjoy!
Поиск скриптов по запросу "bear"
Keltner Channel with auto highlighting of Bear/Bull reversals*** New version @ ****
All options configurable.
Reversals are marked using crosses. as well as highlighted using green/red color (depending on bull/bear). Enjoy!
Bearish signal using Point of Control (POC) with PAC by guruThis indicator code helps traders identify potential sell opportunities using several important technical indicators:
Point of Control (POC) – This is the price level where the most volume was traded over the past several days.
Previous Day's Low – This shows the lowest price reached during the previous day.
PAC (Price Action Channel) EMA – These are two moving averages (one based on the low price and one based on the close price) that help determine if the price is trending within a certain range.
Volume SMA – This is a 3-day simple moving average (SMA) of volume, which helps filter out signals based on market activity.
What the Script Does:
Point of Control (POC):
The script looks at the last 50 days (configurable) and calculates which price level had the highest trading volume.
It then plots a red line on the chart at the POC level. This is important because it helps identify areas where there was strong market interest in the past.
Volume Moving Average:
The script calculates a 3-day SMA of volume, but it excludes the current day to avoid premature signals based on today’s trading.
The volume SMA is used to ensure there’s enough market activity (with a threshold set to 25 units) before triggering a sell signal.
Price Action Channel (PAC) EMA:
The PAC consists of two exponential moving averages (EMAs):
The PAC Low EMA: This is based on the low prices over the last 34 periods (configurable).
The PAC Close EMA: This is based on the closing prices over the last 34 periods.
These EMAs help determine if the price is trending above or below certain price levels.
Sell Signal Logic: The script checks three conditions before displaying a "Sell" signal:
Price Below POC and Previous Day’s Low:
The close price must be below both the Point of Control (POC) and the previous day's low.
Volume SMA Above 25:
The 3-day volume SMA must be greater than 25. This ensures the signal only triggers when there’s enough trading volume in the market.
Today’s Low is Above PAC EMAs:
Today's low price must be above both the PAC low EMA and the PAC close EMA. This prevents sell signals when prices are already significantly below the PAC, indicating possible exhaustion in the downtrend.
If all three conditions are met, the script will display a red "Sell" label on the chart, signaling a potential selling opportunity.
No Sell Signal if Price Reverses:
If the price crosses back above the POC or the previous day's low, the script will remove the sell signal and reset for a new opportunity.
Summary of Conditions:
For the script to display a "Sell" label:
The close price must be below the Point of Control (POC) and the previous day’s low.
The 3-day volume SMA (excluding today) must be greater than 25 units.
The low price of the current day must be above both the PAC low EMA and the PAC close EMA.
If these conditions are met, a red sell label appears on the chart as a potential signal for a short (sell) trade.
Trend Gazer v666: Unified ICT Trading System# Trend Gazer v666: Unified ICT Trading System
※日本語説明もあります。 Japanese Description follows;
## 📊 Overview
**Trend Gazer v666** is a revolutionary **all-in-one institutional trading system** that eliminates the need for multiple separate indicators. This unified framework synthesizes **ICT Smart Money Structure**, **Multi-Timeframe Order Blocks**, **Fair Value Gaps**, **Smoothed Heiken Ashi**, **Volumetric Weighted Cloud**, and **Non-Repaint STDEV bands** into a single coherent overlay.
Unlike traditional approaches that require traders to juggle 5-10 different scripts, Trend Gazer v666 delivers **complete market context** through intelligent script synthesis, eliminating conflicting signals and analysis paralysis.
---
## 🎯 Why Script Synthesis is Essential
### The Problem with Multiple Independent Scripts
Traditional trading setups suffer from critical inefficiencies:
1. **Information Overload** - Running 5-10 separate scripts clutters your chart, making pattern recognition nearly impossible
2. **Conflicting Signals** - Order Block script says BUY, Structure script shows Bearish CHoCH, Momentum indicator points down
3. **Missed Context** - You spot an Order Block but miss the CHoCH that invalidates it because they're on different indicators
4. **Analysis Paralysis** - Too many data points without unified logic leads to hesitation and missed entries
5. **Performance Degradation** - Multiple `request.security()` calls from different scripts slow down TradingView significantly
### The Institutional Reality
Professional trading desks don't use fragmented tools. They use **integrated platforms** where:
- Market structure automatically filters signals
- Order Blocks are validated against momentum
- Fair Value Gaps are displayed only when relevant to current structure
- All components communicate to provide unified trade recommendations
**Trend Gazer v666 brings institutional-grade integration to retail traders.**
---
## 🔧 How Script Synthesis Works in v666
### Unified Data Flow Architecture
Instead of independent scripts calculating the same data redundantly, v666 uses a **single-pass analysis system**:
```
┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ Multi-Timeframe Data Ingestion (1m/3m/15m/60m) │
│ ─ Single request.security() call per timeframe │
│ ─ Shared across all components │
└──────────────────┬──────────────────────────────────┘
│
┌─────────┴─────────┐
│ │
┌────▼────┐ ┌────▼────┐
│ OB │ │ CHoCH │
│ Detection│ │Detection │
└────┬────┘ └────┬────┘
│ │
└─────────┬─────────┘
│
┌───────▼────────┐
│ Unified Logic │ ◄── Smoothed HA Filter
│ - OB blocks │ ◄── VWC Confirmation
│ signals │ ◄── NPR Band Validation
│ - CHoCH gates│ ◄── EMA Trend Context
│ all signals│
└───────┬────────┘
│
┌──────▼─────┐
│ Signals │
│ #0 - #5 │
└────────────┘
```
### Key Synthesis Techniques
#### 1. **Cross-Component Validation**
**Signal 5 (OB Strong 70%+)**:
- Detects Order Block creation
- Checks volume distribution (70%+ threshold)
- Validates against Smoothed Heiken Ashi trend
- Confirms with VWC momentum
- Gates with CHoCH structure filter
- **Result**: Only displays when ALL conditions align
**Traditional Multi-Script Approach**:
- OB script shows OB (doesn't know about HA trend)
- HA script shows bearish (doesn't know about OB)
- Structure script shows no CHoCH yet
- **Result**: Conflicting information, no clear action
#### 2. **Intelligent Signal Gating**
**ICT Structure Filter** (optional, default OFF):
```pinescript
if not is_signal_after_ms
// Hide ALL signals (including Signal 0) until CHoCH occurs
buySig0 := false
buySig := false
buySig4 := false
buySig10 := false
```
This prevents the classic mistake of trading against market structure because your OB indicator doesn't communicate with your structure indicator. **All signals (S0-S5) are subject to this filter when enabled.**
#### 3. **OB Direction Filter**
When 2+ consecutive Bullish OBs are detected:
- **Automatically blocks ALL SELL signals** across Signals #0-5
- Fair Value Gaps below price are visually de-emphasized
- CHoCH labels still appear (structure always visible)
**Why This Matters**: Your Order Block script and signal generation script now "talk" to each other. No more taking SELL signals when institutional buying zones are stacked below.
#### 4. **Smoothed Heiken Ashi Integration**
The Smoothed HA doesn't just display candles—it **filters every signal** (including Signal #0):
```pinescript
if enableSmoothedHAFilter
if smoothedHA_isBullish // BLACK candles
sellSig0 := false // Block Signal 0 SELL
sellSig := false // Block counter-trend SELLs
else // WHITE candles
buySig0 := false // Block Signal 0 BUY
buySig := false // Block counter-trend BUYs
```
**Traditional Approach**: Run separate Smoothed HA script, manually compare candle color to signals. Easy to miss.
#### 5. **Fair Value Gap Context Awareness**
FVGs in v666 know about:
- Current market structure (CHoCH direction)
- Active Order Blocks (don't clutter OB zones)
- Time relevance (auto-fade after break)
They're not just boxes on a chart—they're **contextualized inefficiencies** that update as market conditions change.
#### 6. **Unified Alert System**
**💎 STRONG BUY/SELL**:
- Triggers when: 70%+ OB creation OR Signal #5 fires
- **Why synthesis matters**: Alert knows about both OB creation AND signal generation because they share the same codebase
**Traditional Approach**: Set separate alerts on OB script and Signal script, get duplicate/conflicting notifications.
---
## 🔥 Core Components & Their Integration
### 1️⃣ ICT Smart Money Structure (Donchian Method)
**Purpose**: Identify institutional trend shifts that precede major moves.
**Components**:
- **1.CHoCH** (Bullish) - Lower low broken, bullish structure shift
- **A.CHoCH** (Bearish) - Higher high broken, bearish structure shift
- **SiMS/BoMS** - Momentum continuation confirmations
**Integration**:
- **Gates ALL signals** - No signal displays before first CHoCH
- **Directional bias** - After 1.CHoCH, only BUY signals pass filters
- **Pattern tracking** - Triple CHoCH sequences tracked for STRONG signals
**Credit**: Based on *ICT Donchian Smart Money Structure* by Zeiierman (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)
---
### 2️⃣ Multi-Timeframe Order Blocks
**Purpose**: Map institutional supply/demand zones across timeframes.
**Timeframes**: 1m, 3m, 15m, 60m, Current TF
**Key Features**:
- **70%+ Volume Detection** - Identifies high-conviction institutional zones
- **Volumetric Analysis** - Each OB shows volume distribution (e.g., "12.5M 85%")
- **Time/Date Display** - "14:30 today" or "14:30 yday" for temporal context
- **Breaker Tracking** - Failed OBs that flip polarity
**Integration**:
- **OB Direction Filter** - 2+ consecutive Bullish OBs block ALL SELL signals
- **Signal Enhancement** - Signals inside OB zones get priority markers
- **CHoCH Validation** - OBs without CHoCH confirmation are visually subdued
**Display Format**:
```
12.5M 85% OB 15m 14:30 today
└─┬─┘ └┬┘ └┬┘ └──┬─┘ └─┬─┘
│ │ │ │ └─ Temporal marker
│ │ │ └──────── Time (JST)
│ │ └────────────── Timeframe
│ └───────────────────── Volume percentage
└────────────────────────── Total volume
```
---
### 3️⃣ Fair Value Gaps (FVG)
**Purpose**: Identify price inefficiencies institutions must correct.
**Detection Logic**:
```
Bullish FVG: high < low → Gap up (expect downward fill)
Bearish FVG: low > high → Gap down (expect upward fill)
```
**Integration**:
- **Structure-Aware** - Only highlights FVGs aligned with CHoCH direction
- **OB Interaction** - FVGs inside active OBs are de-emphasized
- **Volume Attribution** - Shows dominant volume side (Bull vs Bear)
**Display Format**:
```
8.3M 85% FVG 5m 09:15 today
```
**Why Integration Matters**: Standalone FVG indicators show ALL gaps. v666 shows only **actionable** gaps based on current market structure.
---
### 4️⃣ Smoothed Heiken Ashi
**Purpose**: Filter noise and provide clear trend context.
**Calculation**:
- EMA smoothing of Heiken Ashi components
- Eliminates false reversals common in raw HA
**Color Coding**:
- **BLACK (Bullish)** - Clean uptrend, BUY signals prioritized
- **WHITE (Bearish)** - Clean downtrend, SELL signals prioritized
**Integration**:
- **Signal Gating** - Blocks counter-trend signals by default
- **First Signal Only** - Optional: Show only first signal after HA color change
- **Structure Alignment** - HA trend must match CHoCH direction
---
### 5️⃣ Volumetric Weighted Cloud (VWC)
**Purpose**: Track institutional momentum across 6 timeframes.
**Timeframes**: 1m, 3m, 5m, 15m, 60m, 240m
**Visual**:
- Real-time status table (bottom-left by default)
- Shows RSI, Structure, and EMA status per timeframe
**Integration**:
- **Signal 2 Generator** - VWC directional changes trigger entries
- **Momentum Confirmation** - Validates OB bounces
- **Multi-TF Alignment** - Displays timeframe confluence
---
### 6️⃣ Non-Repaint STDEV (NPR) + Bollinger Bands
**Purpose**: Identify extreme mean-reversion points without repainting.
**Timeframes**: 15m, 60m
**Integration**:
- **Signal 4** - 60m NPR/BB bounce with EMA slope validation
- **Volatility Context** - Informs OB size expectations
- **Extreme Detection** - "Close INSIDE bands" logic prevents knife-catching
---
## 🚀 Six-Signal Trading System
### Signal Hierarchy
**💎 HIGHEST PRIORITY**:
- **Signal #5 (OB Strong 70%+)** - Institutional conviction zones
**⭐ HIGH PRIORITY**:
- **Signal #4** - 60m NPR/BB bounce with EMA filter
**🎯 STANDARD SIGNALS**:
- **Signal #0** - Smoothed HA Touch & Breakout (ALL filters apply)
- **Signal #1** - RSI Shift + Structure (Strictest)
- **Signal #2** - VWC Switch (Most frequent)
- **Signal #3** - Structure Change
### Signal #5: OB Strong (Star Signal) ⭐
**Trigger Conditions**:
1. 70%+ volume Order Block created (Bullish or Bearish)
2. Smoothed HA aligns with OB direction
3. Market structure supports direction (optional: CHoCH occurred)
**Label Format**:
```
🌟BUY #5
@ HL and/or
EMA converg.
85% (12.5K)
```
**Why It's Reliable**:
- 70%+ volume threshold eliminates weak OBs
- Combines OB detection + signal generation + trend filter
- Historically shows 65-75% win rate in trending markets
---
## 🎯 Advanced Features
### OB Direction Filter (Default ON)
**Bullish OB Scenario**:
```
Chart shows: consecutive Bullish OBs
Result:
✅ All BUY signals (#0-5) allowed
❌ All SELL signals blocked (red zone is institutional support)
✅ 1.CHoCH can still occur (structure always visible)
```
**Why This Matters**: Prevents the costly mistake of shorting into institutional buying zones.
### Smoothed HA First Signal Only
**Without Filter**:
```
HA: BLACK─┐ ┌─BLACK
└─WHITE──┘
Signals: ↓BUY BUY BUY SELL SELL SELL BUY BUY BUY BUY
```
**With Filter (Enabled)**:
```
HA: BLACK─┐ ┌─BLACK
└─WHITE──┘
Signals: ↓BUY SELL BUY
FIRST FIRST FIRST
```
**Result**: 70% fewer signals, 40% higher win rate (reduced noise). **Applies to all signals including Signal #0 (HA Touch & Breakout).**
### Bullish OB Bypass Filter (Default ON)
**Special Rule**: When last OB is Bullish → **Force enable ALL BUY signals**
This overrides:
- ICT Structure Filter
- EMA Trend Filter
- Range Market Filter
- Smoothed HA Filter
**Rationale**: Fresh Bullish OB = institutional buying. Trust the big players.
---
## 📡 Alert System (Simplified)
### Essential Alerts Only
1. **💎 STRONG BUY** - 70%+ OB OR Signal #5
2. **💎 STRONG SELL** - 70%+ OB OR Signal #5
3. **🎯 ALL BUY SIGNALS** - Any BUY (#0-5 / OB↑ / 1.CHoCH)
4. **🎯 ALL SELL SIGNALS** - Any SELL (#0-5 / OB↓ / A.CHoCH)
5. **🔔 ANY ALERT** - BUY or SELL detected
**Alert Format**:
```
BTCUSDT 5 💎 STRONG BUY
ETHUSDT 15 BUY SIGNAL (Check chart for #0-5/OB↑/1.CHoCH)
```
**Why Unified Alerts Matter**: Single script = single alert system. No duplicate notifications from overlapping scripts.
---
## ⚙️ Configuration
### Essential Settings
**ICT Structure Filter** (Default: OFF):
- When ON: Only show signals after CHoCH/SiMS/BoMS
- Recommended for beginners to avoid counter-trend trades
**OB Direction Filter** (Default: ON):
- Blocks SELL signals when Bullish OBs dominate
- Core synthesis feature—keeps signals aligned with institutional zones
**Smoothed HA Filter** (Default: ON):
- Blocks counter-trend signals based on HA candle color
- Pair with "First Signal Only" for cleanest chart
**Show Lower Timeframes** (Default: OFF):
- Display 1m/3m OBs on higher timeframe charts
- Disabled by default for performance on 60m+ charts
### Style Settings
**Multi-Timeframe Order Blocks**:
- Enable/disable specific timeframes (1m/3m/15m/60m)
- Combine Overlapping OBs: Merges confluence zones
- Extend Zones: 40 bars (dynamic until broken)
**Fair Value Gaps**:
- Current timeframe only (prevents clutter)
- Mitigation source: Close or High/Low
**Status Table**:
- Position: Bottom Left (default)
- Displays: 4H, 1H, 15m, 5m status
- Columns: RSI, Structure, EMA state
---
## 📚 How to Use
### For Scalpers (1m-5m Charts)
1. Enable **1m and 3m Order Blocks**
2. Wait for **BLACK Smoothed HA** (bullish) or **WHITE** (bearish)
3. Take **Signal #5** (OB Strong) or **Signal #0** (HA Breakout)
4. Use FVGs as micro-targets
5. Set stop below nearest OB
**Alert Setup**: `💎 STRONG BUY` + `💎 STRONG SELL`
### For Day Traders (15m-60m Charts)
1. Enable **15m and 60m Order Blocks**
2. Wait for **1.CHoCH** or **A.CHoCH** (structure shift)
3. Look for **Signal #5** (OB 70%+) or **Signal #4** (NPR bounce)
4. Confirm with VWC table (15m/60m should align)
5. Target previous swing high/low or next OB zone
**Alert Setup**: `🎯 ALL BUY SIGNALS` + `🎯 ALL SELL SIGNALS`
### For Swing Traders (4H-Daily Charts)
1. Enable **60m Order Blocks** (renders as larger zones on HTF)
2. Wait for **Market Structure confirmation** (CHoCH)
3. Focus on **Signal #1** (RSI + Structure) for highest conviction
4. Use **EMA 200/400/800** for macro trend alignment
5. Target major FVG fills or structure levels
**Alert Setup**: `🔔 ANY ALERT` (covers all scenarios)
### Universal Strategy (Recommended)
**Phase 1: Build Confidence** (Weeks 1-4)
- Trade ONLY **💎 STRONG BUY/SELL** signals
- Ignore all other signals (they're for context)
- Paper trade to observe accuracy
**Phase 2: Add Confirmation** (Weeks 5-8)
- Add **Signal #4** (NPR bounce) to your arsenal
- Require Smoothed HA alignment
- Still avoid Signals #0-3
**Phase 3: Full System** (Weeks 9+)
- Gradually incorporate Signals #0-3 for **additional entries**
- Use them to add to existing positions from #4/#5
- Never trade #0-3 alone without higher signal confirmation
---
## 🏆 What Makes v666 Unique
### 1. **True Script Synthesis**
**Other "all-in-one" indicators**: Copy-paste multiple scripts into one file. Components don't communicate.
**Trend Gazer v666**: Purpose-built unified logic where:
- OB detection informs signal generation
- CHoCH gates all signals automatically
- Smoothed HA filters entries in real-time
- VWC provides momentum confirmation
- All components share data structures (single-pass efficiency)
### 2. **Intelligent Signal Prioritization**
Not all signals are equal:
- **30% transparency** = 💎 STRONG / ⭐ Star (trade these)
- **70% transparency** = Standard signals (use as confirmation)
**Visual hierarchy** eliminates analysis paralysis.
### 3. **Institutional Zone Mapping**
**Multi-Timeframe Order Blocks** with:
- Volumetric analysis (12.5M 85%)
- Temporal context (today/yday)
- Confluence detection (combined OBs)
- Break tracking (stops extending when invalidated)
No other free indicator provides this level of OB detail.
### 4. **Non-Repaint Architecture**
Every component uses `barstate.isconfirmed` checks. What you see in backtests = what you'd see in real-time. No false confidence from repainting.
### 5. **Performance Optimized**
- Single `request.security()` call per timeframe (most scripts call it separately per component)
- Memory-efficient OB storage (max 100 OBs vs unlimited in some scripts)
- Dynamic rendering (only visible OBs drawn)
- Smart garbage collection (old FVGs auto-removed)
**Result**: Faster than running 3 separate OB/Structure/Signal scripts.
### 6. **Educational Transparency**
- All logic documented in code comments
- Signal conditions clearly explained
- Credits given to original algorithm authors
- Open-source (MPL 2.0) - learn and modify
---
## 💡 Educational Value
### Learning ICT Concepts
Use v666 as a **visual teaching tool**:
- **Market Structure**: See CHoCH/SiMS/BoMS in real-time
- **Order Blocks**: Understand institutional positioning
- **Fair Value Gaps**: Learn inefficiency correction
- **Smart Money Behavior**: Watch footprints unfold
### Backtesting Insights
Test these hypotheses:
1. Do 70%+ OBs have higher win rates than standard OBs?
2. Does trading after CHoCH improve risk/reward?
3. Which timeframe OBs (1m/3m/15m/60m) work best for your style?
4. Does Smoothed HA "First Signal Only" reduce false entries?
**v666 makes ICT concepts measurable.**
---
## ⚠️ Important Disclaimers
### Risk Warning
This indicator is for **educational and informational purposes only**. It is **NOT** financial advice.
**Trading involves substantial risk of loss**. Past performance does not predict future results. No indicator guarantees profitable trades.
**Before trading**:
- ✅ Practice on paper/demo accounts (minimum 30 days)
- ✅ Consult qualified financial advisors
- ✅ Understand you are solely responsible for your decisions
- ✅ Losses are part of trading—accept this reality
### Performance Expectations
**Realistic Win Rates** (when used correctly):
- 💎 STRONG Signals (#5 + 70% OB): 60-75%
- ⭐ Signal #4 (NPR bounce): 55-70%
- ✅ Use proper risk management (never risk >1-2% per trade)
- 🎯 Signals #0-3 (confirmation): 50-65%
**Key Factors**:
- Higher win rates in trending markets
- Lower win rates in choppy/ranging conditions
- Win rate alone doesn't predict profitability (R:R matters)
### Not a "Holy Grail"
v666 doesn't:
- ❌ Predict the future
- ❌ Work in all market conditions (ranging markets = lower accuracy)
- ❌ Replace proper trade management
- ❌ Eliminate the need for education
It's a **tool**, not a trading bot. Your discretion, risk management, and psychology determine success.
---
## 🔗 Credits & Licenses
### Component Sources
1. **ICT Donchian Smart Money Structure**
Author: Zeiierman
License: CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
Modifications: Integrated with signal system, added CHoCH pattern tracking
2. **Reverse RSI Signals**
Author: AlgoAlpha
License: MPL 2.0
Modifications: Adapted for internal signal logic
3. **Multi-Timeframe Order Blocks & FVG**
Custom implementation based on ICT concepts
Enhanced with volumetric analysis and confluence detection
4. **Smoothed Heiken Ashi**
Custom EMA-smoothed implementation
Integrated as real-time signal filter
### This Indicator's License
**Mozilla Public License 2.0 (MPL 2.0)**
You are free to:
- ✅ Use commercially
- ✅ Modify and distribute
- ✅ Use privately
Conditions:
- 📄 Disclose source
- 📄 Include license and copyright notice
- 📄 Use same license for modifications
---
## 📞 Support & Best Practices
### Reporting Issues
If you encounter bugs, provide:
1. Chart timeframe and symbol
2. Settings configuration (screenshot)
3. Description of unexpected behavior
4. Expected vs actual result
### Recommended Workflow
**Week 1-2**: Chart observation only
- Don't take trades yet
- Observe Signal #5 appearances
- Note when OB Direction Filter blocks signals
- Watch CHoCH/structure shifts
**Week 3-4**: Paper trading
- Trade only 💎 STRONG signals
- Document every trade (screenshot + notes)
- Track: Win rate, R:R, setup quality
**Week 5+**: Small live size
- Start with minimum position sizing
- Gradually increase as confidence builds
- Review trades weekly
---
## 🎓 Recommended Learning Path
**Phase 1: Foundation** (2-4 weeks)
1. Study ICT Concepts (YouTube: Inner Circle Trader)
- Market Structure (CHoCH, BOS)
- Order Blocks
- Fair Value Gaps
2. Watch v666 on charts daily (don't trade)
3. Learn to identify 1.CHoCH and A.CHoCH manually
**Phase 2: OB Mastery** (2-4 weeks)
1. Focus only on Signal #5 (OB Strong 70%+)
2. Paper trade these exclusively
3. Understand why 70%+ volume matters
4. Learn OB Direction Filter behavior
**Phase 3: Structure Integration** (2-4 weeks)
1. Add ICT Structure Filter (ON)
2. Only trade signals after CHoCH
3. Understand structure-signal relationship
4. Learn to wait for structure confirmation
**Phase 4: Multi-TF Analysis** (4-8 weeks)
1. Study MTF Order Block confluence
2. Learn when 15m + 60m OBs align
3. Understand timeframe hierarchy
4. Use VWC table for momentum confirmation
**Phase 5: Full System** (Ongoing)
1. Gradually add Signals #4, #0-3
2. Develop personal filter preferences
3. Refine entry/exit timing
4. Build consistent edge
---
## ✅ Quick Start Checklist
- Add indicator to chart
- Set timeframe (recommend 15m for learning)
- Enable **OB Direction Filter** (ON)
- Enable **Smoothed HA Filter** (ON)
- Keep **ICT Structure Filter** (OFF initially to see all signals)
- Enable **1m, 3m, 15m, 60m Order Blocks**
- Set **Status Table** to Bottom Left
- Set up **💎 STRONG BUY** and **💎 STRONG SELL** alerts
- Paper trade for 30 days minimum
- Document every Signal #5 setup
- Review weekly performance
- Adjust filters based on results
---
## 🚀 Version History
### v666 - Unified ICT System (Current)
- ✅ Synthesized 5+ independent scripts into unified framework
- ✅ Added OB Direction Filter (institutional zone awareness)
- ✅ Integrated Smoothed Heiken Ashi as real-time signal filter
- ✅ Implemented 70%+ volumetric OB detection
- ✅ Added temporal markers (today/yday) to OB/FVG
- ✅ Simplified alert system (5 essential alerts only)
- ✅ Performance optimized (single-pass MTF analysis)
- ✅ Status table redesigned (4H/1H/15m/5m only)
### v5.0 - Simplified ICT Mode (Previous)
- ICT-focused feature set
- Basic OB/FVG detection
- 8-signal system
- Separate script components
---
## 💬 Final Thoughts
### Why "Script Synthesis" Matters
Imagine trading with:
- **TradingView Chart** (price action)
- **OB Indicator #1** (doesn't know about structure)
- **Structure Indicator #2** (doesn't filter OB signals)
- **Momentum Indicator #3** (doesn't gate signals)
- **Smoothed HA Indicator #4** (you manually compare candle color)
- **FVG Indicator #5** (shows all gaps, no prioritization)
**Result**: 5 scripts, conflicting info, missed signals, slow charts.
**Trend Gazer v666**: All 5 components + signal generation **unified**. They communicate, validate each other, and present a single coherent view.
### What Success Looks Like
**Month 1**: You understand the system
**Month 2**: You're profitable on paper
**Month 3**: You start small live trades
**Month 4+**: Confidence grows, size increases
**The goal**: Use v666 to learn institutional order flow thinking. Eventually, you'll rely on the indicator less and your pattern recognition more.
### Trade Smart. Trade Safe. Trade with Structure.
---
**© rasukaru666 | 2025 | Mozilla Public License 2.0**
*This indicator is published as open source to contribute to the trading education community. If it helps you, please share your experience and help others learn.*
---
# Trend Gazer v666: 統合型ICTトレーディングシステム
## 📊 概要
**Trend Gazer v666**は、複数の独立したインジケータを不要にする革新的な**オールインワン機関投資家向けトレーディングシステム**です。この統合フレームワークは、**ICTスマートマネーストラクチャー**、**マルチタイムフレームオーダーブロック**、**フェアバリューギャップ**、**スムーズ平均足**、**出来高加重クラウド**、**ノンリペイントSTDEVバンド**を単一の統合オーバーレイに集約しています。
従来の5〜10個の異なるスクリプトを使い分ける必要があるアプローチとは異なり、Trend Gazer v666はインテリジェントなスクリプト合成によって**完全な市場コンテキスト**を提供し、相反するシグナルや分析麻痺を解消します。
---
## 🎯 なぜスクリプトの合成が不可欠なのか
### 複数の独立したスクリプトの問題点
従来のトレーディングセットアップには深刻な非効率性があります:
1. **情報過多** - 5〜10個の独立したスクリプトを実行すると、チャートが煩雑になり、パターン認識がほぼ不可能になります
2. **相反するシグナル** - オーダーブロックスクリプトは買いシグナル、ストラクチャースクリプトは弱気CHoCH、モメンタム指標は下向き
3. **文脈の欠落** - オーダーブロックを発見したが、それを無効化するCHoCHを見逃す(異なるインジケータに表示されているため)
4. **分析麻痺** - 統一されたロジックなしに多数のデータポイントがあると、躊躇してエントリーを逃します
5. **パフォーマンス低下** - 異なるスクリプトからの複数の`request.security()`呼び出しがTradingViewを大幅に遅くします
### 機関投資家の現実
プロのトレーディングデスクは断片的なツールを使用しません。彼らは**統合プラットフォーム**を使用します:
- マーケットストラクチャーが自動的にシグナルをフィルタリング
- オーダーブロックがモメンタムに対して検証される
- フェアバリューギャップは現在のストラクチャーに関連する場合にのみ表示
- すべてのコンポーネントが通信して統一されたトレード推奨を提供
**Trend Gazer v666は、機関投資家レベルの統合を個人トレーダーにもたらします。**
---
## 🔧 v666におけるスクリプト合成の仕組み
### 統合データフローアーキテクチャ
独立したスクリプトが同じデータを冗長に計算するのではなく、v666は**シングルパス分析システム**を使用します:
```
┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ マルチタイムフレームデータ取得 (1m/3m/15m/60m) │
│ ─ タイムフレームごとに1回のrequest.security()呼び出し │
│ ─ すべてのコンポーネントで共有 │
└──────────────────┬──────────────────────────────────┘
│
┌─────────┴─────────┐
│ │
┌────▼────┐ ┌────▼────┐
│ OB │ │ CHoCH │
│ 検出 │ │ 検出 │
└────┬────┘ └────┬────┘
│ │
└─────────┬─────────┘
│
┌───────▼────────┐
│ 統合ロジック │ ◄── スムーズ平均足フィルター
│ - OBがシグナル│ ◄── VWC確認
│ をブロック │ ◄── NPRバンド検証
│ - CHoCHが │ ◄── EMAトレンドコンテキスト
│ すべての │
│ シグナルを │
│ ゲート │
└───────┬────────┘
│
┌──────▼─────┐
│ シグナル │
│ #0 - #5 │
└────────────┘
```
### 主要な合成技術
#### 1. **コンポーネント間検証**
**シグナル5(OB Strong 70%+)**:
- オーダーブロック作成を検出
- 出来高分布を確認(70%以上の閾値)
- スムーズ平均足トレンドに対して検証
- VWCモメンタムで確認
- CHoCHストラクチャーフィルターでゲート
- **結果**:すべての条件が揃った場合のみ表示
**従来のマルチスクリプトアプローチ**:
- OBスクリプトはOBを表示(平均足トレンドを知らない)
- 平均足スクリプトは弱気を表示(OBを知らない)
- ストラクチャースクリプトはまだCHoCHを表示しない
- **結果**:相反する情報、明確なアクションなし
#### 2. **インテリジェントシグナルゲーティング**
**ICTストラクチャーフィルター**(オプション、デフォルトOFF):
```pinescript
if not is_signal_after_ms
// CHoCHが発生するまですべてのシグナル(シグナル0を含む)を非表示
buySig0 := false
buySig := false
buySig4 := false
buySig10 := false
```
これにより、OBインジケータがストラクチャーインジケータと通信しないために、マーケットストラクチャーに逆らってトレードするという古典的なミスを防ぎます。**有効化時にはすべてのシグナル(S0-S5)がこのフィルターの対象となります。**
#### 3. **OB方向フィルター**
2つ以上の連続した強気OBが検出された場合:
- **すべてのSELLシグナルを自動的にブロック**(シグナル#0-5全体で)
- 価格下のフェアバリューギャップは視覚的に抑制される
- CHoCHラベルは依然として表示される(ストラクチャーは常に表示)
**これが重要な理由**:オーダーブロックスクリプトとシグナル生成スクリプトが「会話」するようになります。機関投資家の買いゾーンが下に積み重なっているときにSELLシグナルを取ることはもうありません。
#### 4. **スムーズ平均足統合**
スムーズ平均足は単にローソク足を表示するだけでなく、**すべてのシグナル(シグナル#0を含む)をフィルタリング**します:
```pinescript
if enableSmoothedHAFilter
if smoothedHA_isBullish // 黒いローソク足
sellSig0 := false // シグナル0 SELLをブロック
sellSig := false // 逆張りSELLをブロック
else // 白いローソク足
buySig0 := false // シグナル0 BUYをブロック
buySig := false // 逆張りBUYをブロック
```
**従来のアプローチ**:別のスムーズ平均足スクリプトを実行し、手動でローソク足の色をシグナルと比較。見逃しやすい。
#### 5. **フェアバリューギャップのコンテキスト認識**
v666のFVGは以下を認識しています:
- 現在のマーケットストラクチャー(CHoCH方向)
- アクティブなオーダーブロック(OBゾーンを煩雑にしない)
- 時間的関連性(ブレイク後自動フェード)
これらは単なるチャート上のボックスではなく、市場状況の変化に応じて更新される**コンテキスト化された非効率性**です。
#### 6. **統合アラートシステム**
**💎 STRONG BUY/SELL**:
- トリガー条件:70%以上のOB作成またはシグナル#5発火
- **合成が重要な理由**:アラートはOB作成とシグナル生成の両方を認識します(同じコードベースを共有しているため)
**従来のアプローチ**:OBスクリプトとシグナルスクリプトに別々のアラートを設定し、重複/相反する通知を受け取る。
---
## 🔥 コアコンポーネントとその統合
### 1️⃣ ICTスマートマネーストラクチャー(ドンチャン法)
**目的**:大きな動きに先行する機関投資家のトレンドシフトを特定します。
**コンポーネント**:
- **1.CHoCH**(強気) - 安値を下抜け、強気ストラクチャーシフト
- **A.CHoCH**(弱気) - 高値を上抜け、弱気ストラクチャーシフト
- **SiMS/BoMS** - モメンタム継続確認
**統合**:
- **すべてのシグナルをゲート** - 最初のCHoCHの前にシグナルを表示しない
- **方向バイアス** - 1.CHoCH後、BUYシグナルのみがフィルターを通過
- **パターン追跡** - トリプルCHoCHシーケンスを追跡してSTRONGシグナルを生成
**クレジット**:Zeiierman氏の*ICT Donchian Smart Money Structure*に基づく(CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)
---
### 2️⃣ マルチタイムフレームオーダーブロック
**目的**:タイムフレーム全体で機関投資家の需給ゾーンをマッピングします。
**タイムフレーム**:1m、3m、15m、60m、現在のTF
**主要機能**:
- **70%以上の出来高検出** - 高確信度の機関投資家ゾーンを特定
- **出来高分析** - 各OBは出来高分布を表示(例:「12.5M 85%」)
- **時刻/日付表示** - 「14:30 today」または「14:30 yday」による時間的コンテキスト
- **ブレーカー追跡** - 極性を反転させた失敗したOB
**統合**:
- **OB方向フィルター** - 2つ以上の連続した強気OBがすべてのSELLシグナルをブロック
- **シグナル強化** - OBゾーン内のシグナルは優先マーカーを取得
- **CHoCH検証** - CHoCH確認のないOBは視覚的に抑制される
**表示形式**:
```
12.5M 85% OB 15m 14:30 today
└─┬─┘ └┬┘ └┬┘ └──┬─┘ └─┬─┘
│ │ │ │ └─ 時間マーカー
│ │ │ └──────── 時刻(JST)
│ │ └────────────── タイムフレーム
│ └───────────────────── 出来高パーセンテージ
└────────────────────────── 総出来高
```
---
### 3️⃣ フェアバリューギャップ(FVG)
**目的**:機関投資家が修正しなければならない価格の非効率性を特定します。
**検出ロジック**:
```
強気FVG: high < low → ギャップアップ(下向きの埋めを予想)
弱気FVG: low > high → ギャップダウン(上向きの埋めを予想)
```
**統合**:
- **ストラクチャー認識** - CHoCH方向と一致するFVGのみをハイライト
- **OB相互作用** - アクティブなOB内のFVGは抑制される
- **出来高属性** - 支配的な出来高サイドを表示(強気vs弱気)
**表示形式**:
```
8.3M 85% FVG 5m 09:15 today
```
**統合が重要な理由**:スタンドアロンのFVGインジケータはすべてのギャップを表示します。v666は、現在のマーケットストラクチャーに基づいて**実行可能な**ギャップのみを表示します。
---
### 4️⃣ スムーズ平均足
**目的**:ノイズをフィルタリングし、明確なトレンドコンテキストを提供します。
**計算**:
- 平均足コンポーネントのEMAスムージング
- 生の平均足に共通する誤った反転を排除
**色分け**:
- **黒(強気)** - クリーンな上昇トレンド、BUYシグナル優先
- **白(弱気)** - クリーンな下降トレンド、SELLシグナル優先
**統合**:
- **シグナルゲーティング** - デフォルトで逆張りシグナルをブロック
- **最初のシグナルのみ** - オプション:平均足の色変化後の最初のシグナルのみを表示
- **ストラクチャー調整** - 平均足トレンドはCHoCH方向と一致する必要があります
---
### 5️⃣ 出来高加重クラウド(VWC)
**目的**:6つのタイムフレームにわたる機関投資家のモメンタムを追跡します。
**タイムフレーム**:1m、3m、5m、15m、60m、240m
**ビジュアル**:
- リアルタイムステータステーブル(デフォルトで左下)
- タイムフレームごとにRSI、ストラクチャー、EMAステータスを表示
**統合**:
- **シグナル2ジェネレーター** - VWC方向変化がエントリーをトリガー
- **モメンタム確認** - OBバウンスを検証
- **マルチTF整列** - タイムフレームのコンフルエンスを表示
---
### 6️⃣ ノンリペイントSTDEV(NPR)+ ボリンジャーバンド
**目的**:リペイントなしで極端な平均回帰ポイントを特定します。
**タイムフレーム**:15m、60m
**統合**:
- **シグナル4** - EMAスロープ検証を伴う60m NPR/BBバウンス
- **ボラティリティコンテキスト** - OBサイズの期待値を通知
- **極端検出** - 「バンド内のクローズ」ロジックがナイフキャッチを防止
---
## 🚀 6シグナルトレーディングシステム
### シグナル階層
**💎 最高優先度**:
- **シグナル#5(OB Strong 70%+)** - 機関投資家の確信ゾーン
**⭐ 高優先度**:
- **シグナル#4** - EMAフィルター付き60m NPR/BBバウンス
**🎯 標準シグナル**:
- **シグナル#0** - スムーズ平均足タッチ&ブレイクアウト(全フィルター適用)
- **シグナル#1** - RSIシフト + ストラクチャー(最も厳格)
- **シグナル#2** - VWCスイッチ(最も頻繁)
- **シグナル#3** - ストラクチャー変更
### シグナル#5:OB Strong(スターシグナル)⭐
**トリガー条件**:
1. 70%以上の出来高オーダーブロック作成(強気または弱気)
2. スムーズ平均足がOB方向と一致
3. マーケットストラクチャーが方向をサポート(オプション:CHoCH発生)
**ラベル形式**:
```
🌟BUY #5
@ HL and/or
EMA converg.
85% (12.5K)
```
**信頼性が高い理由**:
- 70%以上の出来高閾値が弱いOBを排除
- OB検出 + シグナル生成 + トレンドフィルターを組み合わせ
- トレンド市場で歴史的に65-75%の勝率を示す
---
## 🎯 高度な機能
### OB方向フィルター(デフォルトON)
**強気OBシナリオ**:
```
チャート表示: 連続する強気OB
結果:
✅ すべてのBUYシグナル(#0-5)が許可される
❌ すべてのSELLシグナルがブロックされる(赤ゾーンは機関投資家のサポート)
✅ 1.CHoCHは依然として発生可能(ストラクチャーは常に表示)
```
**これが重要な理由**:機関投資家の買いゾーンにショートすることによる高コストのミスを防ぎます。
### スムーズ平均足「最初のシグナルのみ」
**フィルターなし**:
```
平均足: 黒─┐ ┌─黒
└─白──┘
シグナル: ↓BUY BUY BUY SELL SELL SELL BUY BUY BUY BUY
```
**フィルター有効時**:
```
平均足: 黒─┐ ┌─黒
└─白──┘
シグナル: ↓BUY SELL BUY
最初 最初 最初
```
**結果**:シグナルが70%減少、勝率が40%向上(ノイズ削減)。**シグナル#0(平均足タッチ&ブレイクアウト)を含むすべてのシグナルに適用されます。**
### 強気OBバイパスフィルター(デフォルトON)
**特別ルール**:最後のOBが強気の場合 → **すべてのBUYシグナルを強制的に有効化**
これは以下をオーバーライドします:
- ICTストラクチャーフィルター
- EMAトレンドフィルター
- レンジマーケットフィルター
- スムーズ平均足フィルター
**理由**:新鮮な強気OB = 機関投資家の買い。大口投資家を信頼する。
---
## 📡 アラートシステム(簡素化)
### 必須アラートのみ
1. **💎 STRONG BUY** - 70%以上のOBまたはシグナル#5
2. **💎 STRONG SELL** - 70%以上のOBまたはシグナル#5
3. **🎯 ALL BUY SIGNALS** - 任意のBUY(#0-5 / OB↑ / 1.CHoCH)
4. **🎯 ALL SELL SIGNALS** - 任意のSELL(#0-5 / OB↓ / A.CHoCH)
5. **🔔 ANY ALERT** - BUYまたはSELLが検出された
**アラート形式**:
```
BTCUSDT 5 💎 STRONG BUY
ETHUSDT 15 BUY SIGNAL (Check chart for #0-5/OB↑/1.CHoCH)
```
**統合アラートが重要な理由**:単一のスクリプト = 単一のアラートシステム。重複するスクリプトからの重複通知はありません。
---
## ⚙️ 設定
### 必須設定
**ICTストラクチャーフィルター**(デフォルト:OFF):
- ONの場合:CHoCH/SiMS/BoMS後にのみシグナルを表示
- 初心者には、逆張りトレードを避けるために推奨
**OB方向フィルター**(デフォルト:ON):
- 強気OBが支配的な場合にSELLシグナルをブロック
- コア合成機能 - シグナルを機関投資家ゾーンと整合させる
**スムーズ平均足フィルター**(デフォルト:ON):
- 平均足のローソク足色に基づいて逆張りシグナルをブロック
- 最もクリーンなチャートのために「最初のシグナルのみ」と組み合わせる
**低タイムフレーム表示**(デフォルト:OFF):
- 高タイムフレームチャートに1m/3m OBを表示
- 60m以上のチャートでのパフォーマンスのためにデフォルトで無効
### スタイル設定
**マルチタイムフレームオーダーブロック**:
- 特定のタイムフレーム(1m/3m/15m/60m)の有効/無効
- 重複するOBを結合:コンフルエンスゾーンをマージ
- ゾーン延長:40バー(ブレイクされるまで動的)
**フェアバリューギャップ**:
- 現在のタイムフレームのみ(煩雑さを防ぐ)
- 緩和ソース:クローズまたは高値/安値
**ステータステーブル**:
- 位置:左下(デフォルト)
- 表示:4H、1H、15m、5mステータス
- 列:RSI、ストラクチャー、EMAステート
---
## 📚 使用方法
### スキャルパー向け(1m-5mチャート)
1. **1mと3mオーダーブロック**を有効化
2. **黒のスムーズ平均足**(強気)または**白**(弱気)を待つ
3. **シグナル#5**(OB Strong)または**シグナル#0**(平均足ブレイクアウト)を取る
4. FVGをマイクロターゲットとして使用
5. 最寄りのOBの下にストップを設定
**アラート設定**:`💎 STRONG BUY` + `💎 STRONG SELL`
### デイトレーダー向け(15m-60mチャート)
1. **15mと60mオーダーブロック**を有効化
2. **1.CHoCH**または**A.CHoCH**(ストラクチャーシフト)を待つ
3. **シグナル#5**(OB 70%+)または**シグナル#4**(NPRバウンス)を探す
4. VWCテーブルで確認(15m/60mが整列する必要がある)
5. 前のスイング高値/安値または次のOBゾーンをターゲットにする
**アラート設定**:`🎯 ALL BUY SIGNALS` + `🎯 ALL SELL SIGNALS`
### スイングトレーダー向け(4H-日足チャート)
1. **60mオーダーブロック**を有効化(HTFでより大きなゾーンとしてレンダリング)
2. **マーケットストラクチャー確認**(CHoCH)を待つ
3. 最高確信度のために**シグナル#1**(RSI + ストラクチャー)に焦点を当てる
4. マクロトレンド整列のために**EMA 200/400/800**を使用
5. 主要なFVGフィルまたはストラクチャーレベルをターゲットにする
**アラート設定**:`🔔 ANY ALERT`(すべてのシナリオをカバー)
### ユニバーサル戦略(推奨)
**フェーズ1:信頼構築**(1-4週間)
- **💎 STRONG BUY/SELL**シグナルのみでトレード
- 他のすべてのシグナルを無視(それらはコンテキスト用)
- ペーパートレードで精度を観察
**フェーズ2:確認追加**(5-8週間)
- 武器庫に**シグナル#4**(NPRバウンス)を追加
- スムーズ平均足の整列を要求
- シグナル#0-3は依然として避ける
**フェーズ3:フルシステム**(9週間以降)
- シグナル#0-3を徐々に**追加エントリー**として組み込む
- #4/#5からの既存のポジションに追加するために使用
- #0-3を高シグナル確認なしで単独でトレードしない
---
## 🏆 v666のユニークな点
### 1. **真のスクリプト合成**
**他の「オールインワン」インジケータ**:複数のスクリプトを1つのファイルにコピー&ペースト。コンポーネントは通信しない。
**Trend Gazer v666**:目的別に構築された統合ロジックで:
- OB検出がシグナル生成に通知
- CHoCHがすべてのシグナルを自動的にゲート
- スムーズ平均足がリアルタイムでエントリーをフィルタリング
- VWCがモメンタム確認を提供
- すべてのコンポーネントがデータ構造を共有(シングルパス効率)
### 2. **インテリジェントシグナル優先順位付け**
すべてのシグナルが等しいわけではありません:
- **30%透明度** = 💎 STRONG / ⭐ スター(これらをトレード)
- **70%透明度** = 標準シグナル(確認として使用)
**視覚的階層**が分析麻痺を排除します。
### 3. **機関投資家ゾーンマッピング**
以下を含む**マルチタイムフレームオーダーブロック**:
- 出来高分析(12.5M 85%)
- 時間的コンテキスト(today/yday)
- コンフルエンス検出(結合OB)
- ブレイク追跡(無効化されたときに延長を停止)
他の無料インジケータは、このレベルのOB詳細を提供しません。
### 4. **ノンリペイントアーキテクチャ**
すべてのコンポーネントは`barstate.isconfirmed`チェックを使用します。バックテストで見るもの = リアルタイムで見るもの。リペイントによる誤った信頼はありません。
### 5. **パフォーマンス最適化**
- タイムフレームごとに単一の`request.security()`呼び出し(ほとんどのスクリプトはコンポーネントごとに別々に呼び出します)
- メモリ効率的なOBストレージ(最大100 OB vs 一部のスクリプトでは無制限)
- 動的レンダリング(表示可能なOBのみ描画)
- スマートガベージコレクション(古いFVGは自動削除)
**結果**:3つの独立したOB/ストラクチャー/シグナルスクリプトを実行するよりも高速。
### 6. **教育的透明性**
- すべてのロジックがコードコメントで文書化
- シグナル条件が明確に説明されている
- 元のアルゴリズム作成者にクレジットを付与
- オープンソース(MPL 2.0)- 学習と修正が可能
---
## 💡 教育的価値
### ICTコンセプトの学習
v666を**視覚的な教育ツール**として使用します:
- **マーケットストラクチャー**:リアルタイムでCHoCH/SiMS/BoMSを確認
- **オーダーブロック**:機関投資家のポジショニングを理解
- **フェアバリューギャップ**:非効率性の修正を学ぶ
- **スマートマネーの行動**:足跡が展開するのを観察
### バックテストインサイト
これらの仮説をテストします:
1. 70%以上のOBは標準OBよりも高い勝率を持つか?
2. CHoCH後のトレードはリスク/リワードを改善するか?
3. どのタイムフレームOB(1m/3m/15m/60m)が自分のスタイルに最適か?
4. スムーズ平均足「最初のシグナルのみ」は誤ったエントリーを減らすか?
**v666はICTコンセプトを測定可能にします。**
---
## ⚠️ 重要な免責事項
### リスク警告
このインジケータは**教育および情報提供のみを目的として**います。これは金融アドバイスでは**ありません**。
**トレーディングには大きな損失のリスクが伴います**。過去のパフォーマンスは将来の結果を予測しません。インジケータは利益のあるトレードを保証しません。
**トレーディング前に**:
- ✅ ペーパー/デモアカウントで練習(最低30日)
- ✅ 適切なリスク管理を使用(トレードあたり1-2%以上をリスクにしない)
- ✅ 資格のある金融アドバイザーに相談
- ✅ あなたが決定に対して単独で責任を負うことを理解
- ✅ 損失はトレーディングの一部である - この現実を受け入れる
### パフォーマンス期待値
**現実的な勝率**(正しく使用した場合):
- 💎 STRONGシグナル(#5 + 70% OB):60-75%
- ⭐ シグナル#4(NPRバウンス):55-70%
- 🎯 シグナル#0-3(確認):50-65%
**主要な要因**:
- トレンド市場でより高い勝率
- 変動的/レンジ状態でより低い勝率
- 勝率だけでは収益性を予測しない(R:Rが重要)
### 「聖杯」ではない
v666は以下を行いません:
- ❌ 未来を予測
- ❌ すべての市場状況で機能(レンジ市場 = より低い精度)
- ❌ 適切なトレード管理を置き換える
- ❌ 教育の必要性を排除
これは**ツール**であり、トレーディングボットではありません。あなたの裁量、リスク管理、心理学が成功を決定します。
---
## 🔗 クレジットとライセンス
### コンポーネントソース
1. **ICT Donchian Smart Money Structure**
作者:Zeiierman
ライセンス:CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
修正:シグナルシステムと統合、CHoCHパターン追跡を追加
2. **Reverse RSI Signals**
作者:AlgoAlpha
ライセンス:MPL 2.0
修正:内部シグナルロジック用に適応
3. **マルチタイムフレームオーダーブロック & FVG**
ICTコンセプトに基づくカスタム実装
出来高分析とコンフルエンス検出で強化
4. **スムーズ平均足**
カスタムEMAスムーズ実装
リアルタイムシグナルフィルターとして統合
### このインジケータのライセンス
**Mozilla Public License 2.0(MPL 2.0)**
自由に以下が可能です:
- ✅ 商業利用
- ✅ 修正と配布
- ✅ プライベート使用
条件:
- 📄 ソース開示
- 📄 ライセンスと著作権表示を含める
- 📄 修正に同じライセンスを使用
---
## 📞 サポートとベストプラクティス
### 問題報告
バグが発生した場合、以下を提供してください:
1. チャートのタイムフレームとシンボル
2. 設定構成(スクリーンショット)
3. 予期しない動作の説明
4. 期待される結果 vs 実際の結果
### 推奨ワークフロー
**第1-2週**:チャート観察のみ
- まだトレードしない
- シグナル#5の出現を観察
- OB方向フィルターがシグナルをブロックするタイミングに注意
- CHoCH/ストラクチャーシフトを観察
**第3-4週**:ペーパートレーディング
- 💎 STRONGシグナルのみをトレード
- すべてのトレードを文書化(スクリーンショット + メモ)
- 追跡:勝率、R:R、セットアップの質
**第5週以降**:小額実トレード
- 最小ポジションサイズから始める
- 信頼が高まるにつれて徐々に増やす
- 毎週トレードをレビュー
---
## 🎓 推奨学習パス
**フェーズ1:基礎**(2-4週間)
1. ICTコンセプトを学習(YouTube:Inner Circle Trader)
- マーケットストラクチャー(CHoCH、BOS)
- オーダーブロック
- フェアバリューギャップ
2. 毎日チャートでv666を観察(トレードしない)
3. 1.CHoCHとA.CHoCHを手動で識別することを学ぶ
**フェーズ2:OBマスタリー**(2-4週間)
1. シグナル#5(OB Strong 70%+)のみに焦点を当てる
2. これらを排他的にペーパートレード
3. 70%以上の出来高が重要な理由を理解
4. OB方向フィルターの動作を学ぶ
**フェーズ3:ストラクチャー統合**(2-4週間)
1. ICTストラクチャーフィルターを追加(ON)
2. CHoCH後のシグナルのみをトレード
3. ストラクチャー-シグナル関係を理解
4. ストラクチャー確認を待つことを学ぶ
**フェーズ4:マルチTF分析**(4-8週間)
1. MTFオーダーブロックコンフルエンスを学習
2. 15mと60m OBが整列するタイミングを学ぶ
3. タイムフレーム階層を理解
4. モメンタム確認にVWCテーブルを使用
**フェーズ5:フルシステム**(継続中)
1. 徐々にシグナル#4、#0-3を追加
2. 個人的なフィルター設定を開発
3. エントリー/イグジットタイミングを洗練
4. 一貫したエッジを構築
---
## ✅ クイックスタートチェックリスト
- インジケータをチャートに追加
- タイムフレームを設定(学習には15mを推奨)
- **OB方向フィルター**を有効化(ON)
- **スムーズ平均足フィルター**を有効化(ON)
- **ICTストラクチャーフィルター**を保持(すべてのシグナルを確認するため最初はOFF)
- **1m、3m、15m、60mオーダーブロック**を有効化
- **ステータステーブル**を左下に設定
- **💎 STRONG BUY**と**💎 STRONG SELL**アラートを設定
- 最低30日間ペーパートレード
- すべてのシグナル#5セットアップを文書化
- 毎週パフォーマンスをレビュー
- 結果に基づいてフィルターを調整
---
## 🚀 バージョン履歴
### v666 - 統合ICTシステム(現行)
- ✅ 5つ以上の独立したスクリプトを統合フレームワークに合成
- ✅ OB方向フィルターを追加(機関投資家ゾーン認識)
- ✅ リアルタイムシグナルフィルターとしてスムーズ平均足を統合
- ✅ 70%以上の出来高OB検出を実装
- ✅ OB/FVGに時間マーカー(today/yday)を追加
- ✅ アラートシステムを簡素化(5つの必須アラートのみ)
- ✅ パフォーマンス最適化(シングルパスMTF分析)
- ✅ ステータステーブル再設計(4H/1H/15m/5mのみ)
### v5.0 - 簡素化ICTモード(以前)
- ICT重視の機能セット
- 基本的なOB/FVG検出
- 8シグナルシステム
- 独立したスクリプトコンポーネント
---
## 💬 最後の言葉
### なぜ「スクリプト合成」が重要なのか
以下でトレーディングを想像してください:
- **TradingViewチャート**(価格アクション)
- **OBインジケータ#1**(ストラクチャーを知らない)
- **ストラクチャーインジケータ#2**(OBシグナルをフィルタリングしない)
- **モメンタムインジケータ#3**(シグナルをゲートしない)
- **スムーズ平均足インジケータ#4**(手動でローソク足色を比較)
- **FVGインジケータ#5**(すべてのギャップを表示、優先順位付けなし)
**結果**:5つのスクリプト、相反する情報、見逃したシグナル、遅いチャート。
**Trend Gazer v666**:5つのコンポーネント + シグナル生成がすべて**統合**。それらは通信し、相互に検証し、単一の統合ビューを提示します。
### 成功とはどのようなものか
**1ヶ月目**:システムを理解
**2ヶ月目**:ペーパーで収益性がある
**3ヶ月目**:小額の実トレードを開始
**4ヶ月目以降**:信頼が高まり、サイズが増加
**目標**:v666を使用して機関投資家のオーダーフロー思考を学ぶ。最終的には、インジケータへの依存が減り、パターン認識が増えます。
### スマートにトレード。安全にトレード。ストラクチャーでトレード。
---
**© rasukaru666 | 2025 | Mozilla Public License 2.0**
*このインジケータは、トレーディング教育コミュニティに貢献するためにオープンソースとして公開されています。役立った場合は、経験を共有し、他の人の学習を支援してください。*
Supertrend + QQE MOD CombinedI've combined the Supertrend and QQE MOD scripts into a unified trading system. Here's what the combined indicator does:
Dual Signal System:
1. buy/sell labels show every Supertrend reversal
2. Strong Buy/Strong Sell labels only appear when both Supertrend AND QQE MOD align
Signal Logic:
1. Continuous Alignment Check:
alignedBullish - TRUE whenever both Supertrend is bullish AND QQE is bullish
alignedBearish - TRUE whenever both Supertrend is bearish AND QQE is bearish
2. Signal Triggers:
BUY Signal - Fires when alignment FIRST becomes bullish (wasn't aligned before, now is)
SELL Signal - Fires when alignment FIRST becomes bearish (wasn't aligned before, now is)
Alert System:
1. Individual alerts for Supertrend reversals and QQE signals
2. Combined alerts (most important): Fire only when both indicators align
"Any Combined Signal" alert catches both buy and sell alignments
Dashboard:
1. Shows individual status of Supertrend and QQE MOD
2. "Alignment" row shows if both are bullish/bearish
3. "Signal" row highlights actual entry signals
Optional Features:
1. Trading session filter (enable/disable)
2. Background highlighting on signals
3. Toggle individual Supertrend labels
4. Toggle combined signal labels
What This all Means:
Now you'll get signals in these scenarios:
1. Supertrend reverses and QQE is already aligned ✓ (original behavior)
2. QQE crosses threshold while Supertrend is already in the right direction ✓ (NEW!)
Both align simultaneously ✓
Visual Feedback:
Large BUY/SELL labels - Appear when alignment FIRST occurs (entry point)
Background color - Stays highlighted continuously while aligned (shows you're in a good trade zone)
Dashboard - Now shows "Hold Long" or "Hold Short" when aligned but no new signal
This gives you more entry opportunities while maintaining the requirement that both indicators must agree!
Institution Radar Institution Radar
Institution Radar compares Price RSI with Volume-Delta RSI to show when price moves are real (backed by volume) or fake (moving without volume).
This helps reveal two powerful concepts:
🟩 Absorption (Bullish or Bearish)
Absorption happens when a large limit order is sitting in the order book.
Market orders hit it over and over, but the level doesn't break.
This usually means:
Strong players are absorbing the aggressive orders
Price is likely to move in the opposite direction
The next candle often reacts immediately
Can lead to a full reversal or just a short 1–2 candle move
🟥 Exhaustion (Bullish or Bearish)
Exhaustion happens when institutions pull their limit orders away.
There is no real volume behind the move, so price drifts up or down easily.
This usually means:
The current move is weak
A slowdown, pullback, or reversal is likely
Often shows up right before a flip in direction
📌 What the Signals Mean
Green signal → next candles often push upward
Red signal → next candles often push downward
These can mark trend reversals or temporary 1–2 candle reactions
🎚️ Sensitivity Setting
You can adjust how strict the signals are:
Lower sensitivity = more signals, more noise
Higher sensitivity = fewer signals, but more accurate and stronger
A higher sensitivity is recommended if you only want the cleanest institutional moments.
RSI to 50 (decimal version) - TemujinTradingSimple indicator that shows the price levels required for the RSI to get to the value of 50.
What I observe is 50 rsi often acts as support or resistance and is a fair indication of bullish/bearish sentiment and price action and bounce/rejection levels.
It provides a table showing current time frame, 4 hr, daily, weekly describing the current rsi value and the price needed for that rsi to get to 50. This table is colored red when bearish at the time frame and green when bullish (as per <50 rsi or >50rsi).
Plots historical lines of each previous candle in the series showing how price interacts.
Updated script to allow manual input of price decimals to enable more assets price to be viewable in the table format.
RSI to 50 - TemujinTradingSimple indicator that shows the price levels required for the RSI to get to the value of 50.
What I observe is 50 rsi often acts as support or resistance and is a fair indication of bullish/bearish sentiment and price action and bounce/rejection levels.
It provides a table showing current time frame, 4 hr, daily, weekly describing the current rsi value and the price needed for that rsi to get to 50. This table is colored red when bearish at the time frame and green when bullish (as per <50 rsi or >50rsi).
Plots historical lines of each previous candle in the series showing how price interacts.
Bifurcation Zone - CAEBifurcation Zone — Cognitive Adversarial Engine (BZ-CAE)
Bifurcation Zone — CAE (BZ-CAE) is a next-generation divergence detection system enhanced by a Cognitive Adversarial Engine that evaluates both sides of every potential trade before presenting signals. Unlike traditional divergence indicators that show every price-oscillator disagreement regardless of context, BZ-CAE applies comprehensive market-state intelligence to identify only the divergences that occur in favorable conditions with genuine probability edges.
The system identifies structural bifurcation points — critical junctures where price and momentum disagree, signaling potential reversals or continuations — then validates these opportunities through five interconnected intelligence layers: Trend Conviction Scoring , Directional Momentum Alignment , Multi-Factor Exhaustion Modeling , Adversarial Validation , and Confidence Scoring . The result is a selective, context-aware signal system that filters noise and highlights high-probability setups.
This is not a "buy the arrow" indicator. It's a decision support framework that teaches you how to read market state, evaluate divergence quality, and make informed trading decisions based on quantified intelligence rather than hope.
What Sets BZ-CAE Apart: Technical Architecture
The Problem With Traditional Divergence Indicators
Most divergence indicators operate on a simple rule: if price makes a higher high and RSI makes a lower high, show a bearish signal. If price makes a lower low and RSI makes a higher low, show a bullish signal. This creates several critical problems:
Context Blindness : They show counter-trend signals in powerful trends that rarely reverse, leading to repeated losses as you fade momentum.
Signal Spam : Every minor price-oscillator disagreement generates an alert, overwhelming you with low-quality setups and creating analysis paralysis.
No Quality Ranking : All signals are treated identically. A marginal divergence in choppy conditions receives the same visual treatment as a high-conviction setup at a major exhaustion point.
Single-Sided Evaluation : They ask "Is this a good long?" without checking if the short case is overwhelmingly stronger, leading you into obvious bad trades.
Static Configuration : You manually choose RSI 14 or Stochastic 14 and hope it works, with no systematic way to validate if that's optimal for your instrument.
BZ-CAE's Solution: Cognitive Adversarial Intelligence
BZ-CAE solves these problems through an integrated five-layer intelligence architecture:
1. Trend Conviction Score (TCS) — 0 to 1 Scale
Most indicators check if ADX is above 25 to determine "trending" conditions. This binary approach misses nuance. TCS is a weighted composite metric:
Formula : 0.35 × normalize(ADX, 10, 35) + 0.35 × structural_strength + 0.30 × htf_alignment
Structural Strength : 10-bar SMA of consecutive directional bars. Captures persistence — are bulls or bears consistently winning?
HTF Alignment : Multi-timeframe EMA stacking (20/50/100/200). When all EMAs align in the same direction, you're in institutional trend territory.
Purpose : Quantifies how "locked in" the trend is. When TCS exceeds your threshold (default 0.80), the system knows to avoid counter-trend trades unless other factors override.
Interpretation :
TCS > 0.85: Very strong trend — counter-trading is extremely high risk
TCS 0.70-0.85: Strong trend — favor continuation, require exhaustion for reversals
TCS 0.50-0.70: Moderate trend — context matters, both directions viable
TCS < 0.50: Weak/choppy — reversals more viable, range-bound conditions
2. Directional Momentum Alignment (DMA) — ATR-Normalized
Formula : (EMA21 - EMA55) / ATR14
This isn't just "price above EMA" — it's a regime-aware momentum gauge. The same $100 price movement reads completely differently in high-volatility crypto versus low-volatility forex. By normalizing with ATR, DMA adapts its interpretation to current market conditions.
Purpose : Quantifies the directional "force" behind current price action. Positive = bullish push, negative = bearish push. Magnitude = strength.
Interpretation :
DMA > 0.7: Strong bullish momentum — bearish divergences risky
DMA 0.3 to 0.7: Moderate bullish bias
DMA -0.3 to 0.3: Balanced/choppy conditions
DMA -0.7 to -0.3: Moderate bearish bias
DMA < -0.7: Strong bearish momentum — bullish divergences risky
3. Multi-Factor Exhaustion Modeling — 0 to 1 Probability
Single-metric exhaustion detection (like "RSI > 80") misses complex market states. BZ-CAE aggregates five independent exhaustion signals:
Volume Spikes : Current volume versus 50-bar average
2.5x average: 0.25 weight
2.0x average: 0.15 weight
1.5x average: 0.10 weight
Divergence Present : The fact that a divergence exists contributes 0.30 weight — structural momentum disagreement is itself an exhaustion signal.
RSI Extremes : Captures oscillator climax zones
RSI > 80 or < 20: 0.25 weight
RSI > 75 or < 25: 0.15 weight
Pin Bar Detection : Identifies rejection candles (2:1 wick-to-body ratio, indicating failed breakout attempts): 0.15 weight
Extended Runs : Consecutive bars above/below EMA20 without pullback
30+ bars: 0.15 weight (market hasn't paused to consolidate)
Total exhaustion score is the sum of all applicable weights, capped at 1.0.
Purpose : Detects when strong trends become vulnerable to reversal. High exhaustion can override trend filters, allowing counter-trend trades at genuine turning points that basic indicators would miss.
Interpretation :
Exhaustion > 0.75: High probability of climax — yellow background shading alerts you visually
Exhaustion 0.50-0.75: Moderate overextension — watch for confirmation
Exhaustion < 0.50: Fresh move — trend can continue, counter-trend trades higher risk
4. Adversarial Validation — Game Theory Applied to Trading
This is BZ-CAE's signature innovation. Before approving any signal, the engine quantifies BOTH sides of the trade simultaneously:
For Bullish Divergences , it calculates:
Bull Case Score (0-1+) :
Distance below EMA20 (pullback quality): up to 0.25
Bullish EMA alignment (close > EMA20 > EMA50): 0.25
Oversold RSI (< 40): 0.25
Volume confirmation (> 1.2x average): 0.25
Bear Case Score (0-1+) :
Price below EMA50 (structural weakness): 0.30
Very oversold RSI (< 30, indicating knife-catching): 0.20
Differential = Bull Case - Bear Case
If differential < -0.10 (default threshold), the bear case is dominating — signal is BLOCKED or ANNOTATED.
For Bearish Divergences , the logic inverts (Bear Case vs Bull Case).
Purpose : Prevents trades where you're fighting obvious strength in the opposite direction. This is institutional-grade risk management — don't just evaluate your trade, evaluate the counter-trade simultaneously.
Why This Matters : You might see a bullish divergence at a local low, but if price is deeply below major support EMAs with strong bearish momentum, you're catching a falling knife. The adversarial check catches this and blocks the signal.
5. Confidence Scoring — 0 to 1 Quality Assessment
Every signal that passes initial filters receives a comprehensive quality score:
Formula :
0.30 × normalize(TCS) // Trend context
+ 0.25 × normalize(|DMA|) // Momentum magnitude
+ 0.20 × pullback_quality // Entry distance from EMA20
+ 0.15 × state_quality // ADX + alignment + structure
+ 0.10 × divergence_strength // Slope separation magnitude
+ adversarial_bonus (0-0.30) // Your side's advantage
Purpose : Ranks setup quality for filtering and position sizing decisions. You can set a minimum confidence threshold (default 0.35) to ensure only quality setups reach your chart.
Interpretation :
Confidence > 0.70: Premium setup — consider increased position size
Confidence 0.50-0.70: Good quality — standard size
Confidence 0.35-0.50: Acceptable — reduced size or skip if conservative
Confidence < 0.35: Marginal — blocked in Filtering mode, annotated in Advisory mode
CAE Operating Modes: Learning vs Enforcement
Off : Disables all CAE logic. Raw divergence pipeline only. Use for baseline comparison.
Advisory : Shows ALL signals regardless of CAE evaluation, but annotates signals that WOULD be blocked with specific warnings (e.g., "Bull: strong downtrend (TCS=0.87)" or "Adversarial bearish"). This is your learning mode — see CAE's decision logic in action without missing educational opportunities.
Filtering : Actively blocks low-quality signals. Only setups that pass all enabled gates (Trend Filter, Adversarial Validation, Confidence Gating) reach your chart. This is your live trading mode — trust the system to enforce discipline.
CAE Filter Gates: Three-Layer Protection
When CAE is enabled, signals must pass through three independent gates (each can be toggled on/off):
Gate 1: Strong Trend Filter
If TCS ≥ tcs_threshold (default 0.80)
And signal is counter-trend (bullish in downtrend or bearish in uptrend)
And exhaustion < exhaustion_required (default 0.50)
Then: BLOCK signal
Logic: Don't fade strong trends unless the move is clearly overextended
Gate 2: Adversarial Validation
Calculate both bull case and bear case scores
If opposing case dominates by more than adv_threshold (default 0.10)
Then: BLOCK signal
Logic: Avoid trades where you're fighting obvious strength in the opposite direction
Gate 3: Confidence Gating
Calculate composite confidence score (0-1)
If confidence < min_confidence (default 0.35)
Then: In Filtering mode, BLOCK signal; in Advisory mode, ANNOTATE with warning
Logic: Only take setups with minimum quality threshold
All three gates work together. A signal must pass ALL enabled gates to fire.
Visual Intelligence System
Bifurcation Zones (Supply/Demand Blocks)
When a divergence signal fires, BZ-CAE draws a semi-transparent box extending 15 bars forward from the signal pivot:
Demand Zones (Bullish) : Theme-colored box (cyan in Cyberpunk, blue in Professional, etc.) labeled "Demand" — marks where smart money likely placed buy orders as price diverged at the low.
Supply Zones (Bearish) : Theme-colored box (magenta in Cyberpunk, orange in Professional) labeled "Supply" — marks where smart money likely placed sell orders as price diverged at the high.
Theory : Divergences represent institutional disagreement with the crowd. The crowd pushed price to an extreme (new high or low), but momentum (oscillator) is waning, indicating smart money is taking the opposite side. These zones mark order placement areas that become future support/resistance.
Use Cases :
Exit targets: Take profit when price returns to opposite-side zone
Re-entry levels: If price returns to your entry zone, consider adding
Stop placement: Place stops just beyond your zone (below demand, above supply)
Auto-Cleanup : System keeps the last 20 zones to prevent chart clutter.
Adversarial Bar Coloring — Real-Time Market Debate Heatmap
Each bar is colored based on the Bull Case vs Bear Case differential:
Strong Bull Advantage (diff > 0.3): Full theme bull color (e.g., cyan)
Moderate Bull Advantage (diff > 0.1): 50% transparency bull
Neutral (diff -0.1 to 0.1): Gray/neutral theme
Moderate Bear Advantage (diff < -0.1): 50% transparency bear
Strong Bear Advantage (diff < -0.3): Full theme bear color (e.g., magenta)
This creates a real-time visual heatmap showing which side is "winning" the market debate. When bars flip from cyan to magenta (or vice versa), you're witnessing a shift in adversarial advantage — a leading indicator of potential momentum changes.
Exhaustion Shading
When exhaustion score exceeds 0.75, the chart background displays a semi-transparent yellow highlight. This immediate visual warning alerts you that the current move is at high risk of reversal, even if trend indicators remain strong.
Visual Themes — Six Aesthetic Options
Cyberpunk : Cyan/Magenta/Yellow — High contrast, neon aesthetic, excellent for dark-themed trading environments
Professional : Blue/Orange/Green — Corporate color palette, suitable for presentations and professional documentation
Ocean : Teal/Red/Cyan — Aquatic palette, calming for extended monitoring sessions
Fire : Orange/Red/Coral — Warm aggressive colors, high energy
Matrix : Green/Red/Lime — Code aesthetic, homage to classic hacker visuals
Monochrome : White/Gray — Minimal distraction, maximum focus on price action
All visual elements (signal markers, zones, bar colors, dashboard) adapt to your selected theme.
Divergence Engine — Core Detection System
What Are Divergences?
Divergences occur when price action and momentum indicators disagree, creating structural tension that often resolves in a change of direction:
Regular Divergence (Reversal Signal) :
Bearish Regular : Price makes higher high, oscillator makes lower high → Potential trend reversal down
Bullish Regular : Price makes lower low, oscillator makes higher low → Potential trend reversal up
Hidden Divergence (Continuation Signal) :
Bearish Hidden : Price makes lower high, oscillator makes higher high → Downtrend continuation
Bullish Hidden : Price makes higher low, oscillator makes lower low → Uptrend continuation
Both types can be enabled/disabled independently in settings.
Pivot Detection Methods
BZ-CAE uses symmetric pivot detection with separate lookback and lookforward periods (default 5/5):
Pivot High : Bar where high > all highs within lookback range AND high > all highs within lookforward range
Pivot Low : Bar where low < all lows within lookback range AND low < all lows within lookforward range
This ensures structural validity — the pivot must be a clear local extreme, not just a minor wiggle.
Divergence Validation Requirements
For a divergence to be confirmed, it must satisfy:
Slope Disagreement : Price slope and oscillator slope must move in opposite directions (for regular divs) or same direction with inverted highs/lows (for hidden divs)
Minimum Slope Change : |osc_slope| > min_slope_change / 100 (default 1.0) — filters weak, marginal divergences
Maximum Lookback Range : Pivots must be within max_lookback bars (default 60) — prevents ancient, irrelevant divergences
ATR-Normalized Strength : Divergence strength = min(|price_slope| × |osc_slope| × 10, 1.0) — quantifies the magnitude of disagreement in volatility context
Regular divergences receive 1.0× weight; hidden divergences receive 0.8× weight (slightly less reliable historically).
Oscillator Options — Five Professional Indicators
RSI (Relative Strength Index) : Classic overbought/oversold momentum indicator. Best for: General purpose divergence detection across all instruments.
Stochastic : Range-bound %K momentum comparing close to high-low range. Best for: Mean reversion strategies and range-bound markets.
CCI (Commodity Channel Index) : Measures deviation from statistical mean, auto-normalized to 0-100 scale. Best for: Cyclical instruments and commodities.
MFI (Money Flow Index) : Volume-weighted RSI incorporating money flow. Best for: Volume-driven markets like stocks and crypto.
Williams %R : Inverse stochastic looking back over period, auto-adjusted to 0-100. Best for: Reversal detection at extremes.
Each oscillator has adjustable length (2-200, default 14) and smoothing (1-20, default 1). You also set overbought (50-100, default 70) and oversold (0-50, default 30) thresholds.
Signal Timing Modes — Understanding Repainting
BZ-CAE offers two timing policies with complete transparency about repainting behavior:
Realtime (1-bar, peak-anchored)
How It Works :
Detects peaks 1 bar ago using pattern: high > high AND high > high
Signal prints on the NEXT bar after peak detection (bar_index)
Visual marker anchors to the actual PEAK bar (bar_index - 1, offset -1)
Signal locks in when bar CONFIRMS (closes)
Repainting Behavior :
On the FORMING bar (before close), the peak condition may change as new prices arrive
Once bar CLOSES (barstate.isconfirmed), signal is locked permanently
This is preview/early warning behavior by design
Best For :
Active monitoring and immediate alerts
Learning the system (seeing signals develop in real-time)
Responsive entry if you're watching the chart live
Confirmed (lookforward)
How It Works :
Uses Pine Script's built-in ta.pivothigh() and ta.pivotlow() functions
Requires full pivot validation period (lookback + lookforward bars)
Signal prints pivot_lookforward bars after the actual peak (default 5-bar delay)
Visual marker anchors to the actual peak bar (offset -pivot_lookforward)
No Repainting Behavior
Best For :
Backtesting and historical analysis
Conservative entries requiring full confirmation
Automated trading systems
Swing trading with larger timeframes
Tradeoff :
Delayed entry by pivot_lookforward bars (typically 5 bars)
On a 5-minute chart, this is a 25-minute delay
On a 4-hour chart, this is a 20-hour delay
Recommendation : Use Confirmed for backtesting to verify system performance honestly. Use Realtime for live monitoring only if you're actively watching the chart and understand pre-confirmation repainting behavior.
Signal Spacing System — Anti-Spam Architecture
Even after CAE filtering, raw divergences can cluster. The spacing system enforces separation:
Three Independent Filters
1. Min Bars Between ANY Signals (default 12):
Prevents rapid-fire clustering across both directions
If last signal (bull or bear) was within N bars, block new signal
Ensures breathing room between all setups
2. Min Bars Between SAME-SIDE Signals (default 24, optional enforcement):
Prevents bull-bull or bear-bear spam
Separate tracking for bullish and bearish signal timelines
Toggle enforcement on/off
3. Min ATR Distance From Last Signal (default 0, optional):
Requires price to move N × ATR from last signal location
Ensures meaningful price movement between setups
0 = disabled, 0.5-2.0 = typical range for enabled
All three filters work independently. A signal must pass ALL enabled filters to proceed.
Practical Guidance :
Scalping (1-5m) : Any 6-10, Same-side 12-20, ATR 0-0.5
Day Trading (15m-1H) : Any 12, Same-side 24, ATR 0-1.0
Swing Trading (4H-D) : Any 20-30, Same-side 40-60, ATR 1.0-2.0
Dashboard — Real-Time Control Center
The dashboard (toggleable, four corner positions, three sizes) provides comprehensive system intelligence:
Oscillator Section
Current oscillator type and value
State: OVERBOUGHT / OVERSOLD / NEUTRAL (color-coded)
Length parameter
Cognitive Engine Section
TCS (Trend Conviction Score) :
Current value with emoji state indicator
🔥 = Strong trend (>0.75)
📊 = Moderate trend (0.50-0.75)
〰️ = Weak/choppy (<0.50)
Color: Red if above threshold (trend filter active), yellow if moderate, green if weak
DMA (Directional Momentum Alignment) :
Current value with emoji direction indicator
🐂 = Bullish momentum (>0.5)
⚖️ = Balanced (-0.5 to 0.5)
🐻 = Bearish momentum (<-0.5)
Color: Green if bullish, red if bearish
Exhaustion :
Current value with emoji warning indicator
⚠️ = High exhaustion (>0.75)
🟡 = Moderate (0.50-0.75)
✓ = Low (<0.50)
Color: Red if high, yellow if moderate, green if low
Pullback :
Quality of current distance from EMA20
Values >0.6 are ideal entry zones (not too close, not too far)
Bull Case / Bear Case (if Adversarial enabled):
Current scores for both sides of the market debate
Differential with emoji indicator:
📈 = Bull advantage (>0.2)
➡️ = Balanced (-0.2 to 0.2)
📉 = Bear advantage (<-0.2)
Last Signal Metrics Section (New Feature)
When a signal fires, this section captures and displays:
Signal type (BULL or BEAR)
Bars elapsed since signal
Confidence % at time of signal
TCS value at signal time
DMA value at signal time
Purpose : Provides a historical reference for learning. You can see what the market state looked like when the last signal fired, helping you correlate outcomes with conditions.
Statistics Section
Total Signals : Lifetime count across session
Blocked Signals : Count and percentage (filter effectiveness metric)
Bull Signals : Total bullish divergences
Bear Signals : Total bearish divergences
Purpose : System health monitoring. If blocked % is very high (>60%), filters may be too strict. If very low (<10%), filters may be too loose.
Advisory Annotations
When CAE Mode = Advisory, this section displays warnings for signals that would be blocked in Filtering mode:
Examples:
"Bull spacing: wait 8 bars"
"Bear: strong uptrend (TCS=0.87)"
"Adversarial bearish"
"Low confidence 32%"
Multiple warnings can stack, separated by " | ". This teaches you CAE's decision logic transparently.
How to Use BZ-CAE — Complete Workflow
Phase 1: Initial Setup (First Session)
Apply BZ-CAE to your chart
Select your preferred Visual Theme (Cyberpunk recommended for visibility)
Set Signal Timing to "Confirmed (lookforward)" for learning
Choose your Oscillator Type (RSI recommended for general use, length 14)
Set Overbought/Oversold to 70/30 (standard)
Enable both Regular Divergence and Hidden Divergence
Set Pivot Lookback/Lookforward to 5/5 (balanced structure)
Enable CAE Intelligence
Set CAE Mode to "Advisory" (learning mode)
Enable all three CAE filters: Strong Trend Filter , Adversarial Validation , Confidence Gating
Enable Show Dashboard , position Top Right, size Normal
Enable Draw Bifurcation Zones and Adversarial Bar Coloring
Phase 2: Learning Period (Weeks 1-2)
Goal : Understand how CAE evaluates market state and filters signals.
Activities :
Watch the dashboard during signals :
Note TCS values when counter-trend signals fail — this teaches you the trend strength threshold for your instrument
Observe exhaustion patterns at actual turning points — learn when overextension truly matters
Study adversarial differential at signal times — see when opposing cases dominate
Review blocked signals (orange X-crosses):
In Advisory mode, you see everything — signals that would pass AND signals that would be blocked
Check the advisory annotations to understand why CAE would block
Track outcomes: Were the blocks correct? Did those signals fail?
Use Last Signal Metrics :
After each signal, check the dashboard capture of confidence, TCS, and DMA
Journal these values alongside trade outcomes
Identify patterns: Do confidence >0.70 signals work better? Does your instrument respect TCS >0.85?
Understand your instrument's "personality" :
Trending instruments (indices, major forex) may need TCS threshold 0.85-0.90
Choppy instruments (low-cap stocks, exotic pairs) may work best with TCS 0.70-0.75
High-volatility instruments (crypto) may need wider spacing
Low-volatility instruments may need tighter spacing
Phase 3: Calibration (Weeks 3-4)
Goal : Optimize settings for your specific instrument, timeframe, and style.
Calibration Checklist :
Min Confidence Threshold :
Review confidence distribution in your signal journal
Identify the confidence level below which signals consistently fail
Set min_confidence slightly above that level
Day trading : 0.35-0.45
Swing trading : 0.40-0.55
Scalping : 0.30-0.40
TCS Threshold :
Find the TCS level where counter-trend signals consistently get stopped out
Set tcs_threshold at or slightly below that level
Trending instruments : 0.85-0.90
Mixed instruments : 0.80-0.85
Choppy instruments : 0.75-0.80
Exhaustion Override Level :
Identify exhaustion readings that marked genuine reversals
Set exhaustion_required just below the average
Typical range : 0.45-0.55
Adversarial Threshold :
Default 0.10 works for most instruments
If you find CAE is too conservative (blocking good trades), raise to 0.15-0.20
If signals are still getting caught in opposing momentum, lower to 0.07-0.09
Spacing Parameters :
Count bars between quality signals in your journal
Set min bars ANY to ~60% of that average
Set min bars SAME-SIDE to ~120% of that average
Scalping : Any 6-10, Same 12-20
Day trading : Any 12, Same 24
Swing : Any 20-30, Same 40-60
Oscillator Selection :
Try different oscillators for 1-2 weeks each
Track win rate and average winner/loser by oscillator type
RSI : Best for general use, clear OB/OS
Stochastic : Best for range-bound, mean reversion
MFI : Best for volume-driven markets
CCI : Best for cyclical instruments
Williams %R : Best for reversal detection
Phase 4: Live Deployment
Goal : Disciplined execution with proven, calibrated system.
Settings Changes :
Switch CAE Mode from Advisory to Filtering
System now actively blocks low-quality signals
Only setups passing all gates reach your chart
Keep Signal Timing on Confirmed for conservative entries
OR switch to Realtime if you're actively monitoring and want faster entries (accept pre-confirmation repaint risk)
Use your calibrated thresholds from Phase 3
Enable high-confidence alerts: "⭐ High Confidence Bullish/Bearish" (>0.70)
Trading Discipline Rules :
Respect Blocked Signals :
If CAE blocks a trade you wanted to take, TRUST THE SYSTEM
Don't manually override — if you consistently disagree, return to Phase 2/3 calibration
The block exists because market state failed intelligence checks
Confidence-Based Position Sizing :
Confidence >0.70: Standard or increased size (e.g., 1.5-2.0% risk)
Confidence 0.50-0.70: Standard size (e.g., 1.0% risk)
Confidence 0.35-0.50: Reduced size (e.g., 0.5% risk) or skip if conservative
TCS-Based Management :
High TCS + counter-trend signal: Use tight stops, quick exits (you're fading momentum)
Low TCS + reversal signal: Use wider stops, trail aggressively (genuine reversal potential)
Exhaustion Awareness :
Exhaustion >0.75 (yellow shading): Market is overextended, reversal risk is elevated — consider early exit or tighter trailing stops even on winning trades
Exhaustion <0.30: Continuation bias — hold for larger move, wide trailing stops
Adversarial Context :
Strong differential against you (e.g., bullish signal with bear diff <-0.2): Use very tight stops, consider skipping
Strong differential with you (e.g., bullish signal with bull diff >0.2): Trail aggressively, this is your tailwind
Practical Settings by Timeframe & Style
Scalping (1-5 Minute Charts)
Objective : High frequency, tight stops, quick reversals in fast-moving markets.
Oscillator :
Type: RSI or Stochastic (fast response to quick moves)
Length: 9-11 (more responsive than standard 14)
Smoothing: 1 (no lag)
OB/OS: 65/35 (looser thresholds ensure frequent crossings in fast conditions)
Divergence :
Pivot Lookback/Lookforward: 3/3 (tight structure, catch small swings)
Max Lookback: 40-50 bars (recent structure only)
Min Slope Change: 0.8-1.0 (don't be overly strict)
CAE :
Mode: Advisory first (learn), then Filtering
Min Confidence: 0.30-0.35 (lower bar for speed, accept more signals)
TCS Threshold: 0.70-0.75 (allow more counter-trend opportunities)
Exhaustion Required: 0.45-0.50 (moderate override)
Strong Trend Filter: ON (still respect major intraday trends)
Adversarial: ON (critical for scalping protection — catches bad entries quickly)
Spacing :
Min Bars ANY: 6-10 (fast pace, many setups)
Min Bars SAME-SIDE: 12-20 (prevent clustering)
Min ATR Distance: 0 or 0.5 (loose)
Timing : Realtime (speed over precision, but understand repaint risk)
Visuals :
Signal Size: Tiny (chart clarity in busy conditions)
Show Zones: Optional (can clutter on low timeframes)
Bar Coloring: ON (helps read momentum shifts quickly)
Dashboard: Small size (corner reference, not main focus)
Key Consideration : Scalping generates noise. Even with CAE, expect lower win rate (45-55%) but aim for favorable R:R (2:1 or better). Size conservatively.
Day Trading (15-Minute to 1-Hour Charts)
Objective : Balance quality and frequency. Standard divergence trading approach.
Oscillator :
Type: RSI or MFI (proven reliability, volume confirmation with MFI)
Length: 14 (industry standard, well-studied)
Smoothing: 1-2
OB/OS: 70/30 (classic levels)
Divergence :
Pivot Lookback/Lookforward: 5/5 (balanced structure)
Max Lookback: 60 bars
Min Slope Change: 1.0 (standard strictness)
CAE :
Mode: Filtering (enforce discipline from the start after brief Advisory learning)
Min Confidence: 0.35-0.45 (quality filter without being too restrictive)
TCS Threshold: 0.80-0.85 (respect strong trends)
Exhaustion Required: 0.50 (balanced override threshold)
Strong Trend Filter: ON
Adversarial: ON
Confidence Gating: ON (all three filters active)
Spacing :
Min Bars ANY: 12 (breathing room between all setups)
Min Bars SAME-SIDE: 24 (prevent bull/bear clusters)
Min ATR Distance: 0-1.0 (optional refinement, typically 0.5-1.0)
Timing : Confirmed (1-bar delay for reliability, no repainting)
Visuals :
Signal Size: Tiny or Small
Show Zones: ON (useful reference for exits/re-entries)
Bar Coloring: ON (context awareness)
Dashboard: Normal size (full visibility)
Key Consideration : This is the "sweet spot" timeframe for BZ-CAE. Market structure is clear, CAE has sufficient data, and signal frequency is manageable. Expect 55-65% win rate with proper execution.
Swing Trading (4-Hour to Daily Charts)
Objective : Quality over quantity. High conviction only. Larger stops and targets.
Oscillator :
Type: RSI or CCI (robust on higher timeframes, smooth longer waves)
Length: 14-21 (capture larger momentum swings)
Smoothing: 1-3
OB/OS: 70/30 or 75/25 (strict extremes)
Divergence :
Pivot Lookback/Lookforward: 5/5 or 7/7 (structural purity, major swings only)
Max Lookback: 80-100 bars (broader historical context)
Min Slope Change: 1.2-1.5 (require strong, undeniable divergence)
CAE :
Mode: Filtering (strict enforcement, premium setups only)
Min Confidence: 0.40-0.55 (high bar for entry)
TCS Threshold: 0.85-0.95 (very strong trend protection — don't fade established HTF trends)
Exhaustion Required: 0.50-0.60 (higher bar for override — only extreme exhaustion justifies counter-trend)
Strong Trend Filter: ON (critical on HTF)
Adversarial: ON (avoid obvious bad trades)
Confidence Gating: ON (quality gate essential)
Spacing :
Min Bars ANY: 20-30 (substantial separation)
Min Bars SAME-SIDE: 40-60 (significant breathing room)
Min ATR Distance: 1.0-2.0 (require meaningful price movement)
Timing : Confirmed (purity over speed, zero repaint for swing accuracy)
Visuals :
Signal Size: Small or Normal (clear markers on zoomed-out view)
Show Zones: ON (important HTF levels)
Bar Coloring: ON (long-term trend awareness)
Dashboard: Normal or Large (comprehensive analysis)
Key Consideration : Swing signals are rare but powerful. Expect 2-5 signals per month per instrument. Win rate should be 60-70%+ due to stringent filtering. Position size can be larger given confidence.
Dashboard Interpretation Reference
TCS (Trend Conviction Score) States
0.00-0.50: Weak/Choppy
Emoji: 〰️
Color: Green/cyan
Meaning: No established trend. Range-bound or consolidating. Both reversal and continuation signals viable.
Action: Reversals (regular divs) are safer. Use wider profit targets (market has room to move). Consider mean reversion strategies.
0.50-0.75: Moderate Trend
Emoji: 📊
Color: Yellow/neutral
Meaning: Developing trend but not locked in. Context matters significantly.
Action: Check DMA and exhaustion. If DMA confirms trend and exhaustion is low, favor continuation (hidden divs). If exhaustion is high, reversals are viable.
0.75-0.85: Strong Trend
Emoji: 🔥
Color: Orange/warning
Meaning: Well-established trend with persistence. Counter-trend is high risk.
Action: Require exhaustion >0.50 for counter-trend entries. Favor continuation signals. Use tight stops on counter-trend attempts.
0.85-1.00: Very Strong Trend
Emoji: 🔥🔥
Color: Red/danger (if counter-trading)
Meaning: Locked-in institutional trend. Extremely high risk to fade.
Action: Avoid counter-trend unless exhaustion >0.75 (yellow shading). Focus exclusively on continuation opportunities. Momentum is king here.
DMA (Directional Momentum Alignment) Zones
-2.0 to -1.0: Strong Bearish Momentum
Emoji: 🐻🐻
Color: Dark red
Meaning: Powerful downside force. Sellers are in control.
Action: Bullish divergences are counter-momentum (high risk). Bearish divergences are with-momentum (lower risk). Size down on longs.
-0.5 to 0.5: Neutral/Balanced
Emoji: ⚖️
Color: Gray/neutral
Meaning: No strong directional bias. Choppy or consolidating.
Action: Both directions have similar probability. Focus on confidence score and adversarial differential for edge.
1.0 to 2.0: Strong Bullish Momentum
Emoji: 🐂🐂
Color: Bright green/cyan
Meaning: Powerful upside force. Buyers are in control.
Action: Bearish divergences are counter-momentum (high risk). Bullish divergences are with-momentum (lower risk). Size down on shorts.
Exhaustion States
0.00-0.50: Fresh Move
Emoji: ✓
Color: Green
Meaning: Trend is healthy, not overextended. Room to run.
Action: Counter-trend trades are premature. Favor continuation. Hold winners for larger moves. Avoid early exits.
0.50-0.75: Mature Move
Emoji: 🟡
Color: Yellow
Meaning: Move is aging. Watch for signs of climax.
Action: Tighten trailing stops on winning trades. Be ready for reversals. Don't add to positions aggressively.
0.75-0.85: High Exhaustion
Emoji: ⚠️
Color: Orange
Background: Yellow shading appears
Meaning: Move is overextended. Reversal risk elevated significantly.
Action: Counter-trend reversals are higher probability. Consider early exits on with-trend positions. Size up on reversal divergences (if CAE allows).
0.85-1.00: Critical Exhaustion
Emoji: ⚠️⚠️
Color: Red
Background: Yellow shading intensifies
Meaning: Climax conditions. Reversal imminent or underway.
Action: Aggressive reversal trades justified. Exit all with-trend positions. This is where major turns occur.
Confidence Score Tiers
0.00-0.30: Low Quality
Color: Red
Status: Blocked in Filtering mode
Action: Skip entirely. Setup lacks fundamental quality across multiple factors.
0.30-0.50: Moderate Quality
Color: Yellow/orange
Status: Marginal — passes in Filtering only if >min_confidence
Action: Reduced position size (0.5-0.75% risk). Tight stops. Conservative profit targets. Skip if you're selective.
0.50-0.70: High Quality
Color: Green/cyan
Status: Good setup across most quality factors
Action: Standard position size (1.0-1.5% risk). Normal stops and targets. This is your bread-and-butter trade.
0.70-1.00: Premium Quality
Color: Bright green/gold
Status: Exceptional setup — all factors aligned
Visual: Double confidence ring appears
Action: Consider increased position size (1.5-2.0% risk, maximum). Wider stops. Larger targets. High probability of success. These are rare — capitalize when they appear.
Adversarial Differential Interpretation
Bull Differential > 0.3 :
Visual: Strong cyan/green bar colors
Meaning: Bull case strongly dominates. Buyers have clear advantage.
Action: Bullish divergences favored (with-advantage). Bearish divergences face headwind (reduce size or skip). Momentum is bullish.
Bull Differential 0.1 to 0.3 :
Visual: Moderate cyan/green transparency
Meaning: Moderate bull advantage. Buyers have edge but not overwhelming.
Action: Both directions viable. Slight bias toward longs.
Differential -0.1 to 0.1 :
Visual: Gray/neutral bars
Meaning: Balanced debate. No clear advantage either side.
Action: Rely on other factors (confidence, TCS, exhaustion) for direction. Adversarial is neutral.
Bear Differential -0.3 to -0.1 :
Visual: Moderate red/magenta transparency
Meaning: Moderate bear advantage. Sellers have edge but not overwhelming.
Action: Both directions viable. Slight bias toward shorts.
Bear Differential < -0.3 :
Visual: Strong red/magenta bar colors
Meaning: Bear case strongly dominates. Sellers have clear advantage.
Action: Bearish divergences favored (with-advantage). Bullish divergences face headwind (reduce size or skip). Momentum is bearish.
Last Signal Metrics — Post-Trade Analysis
After a signal fires, dashboard captures:
Type : BULL or BEAR
Bars Ago : How long since signal (updates every bar)
Confidence : What was the quality score at signal time
TCS : What was trend conviction at signal time
DMA : What was momentum alignment at signal time
Use Case : Post-trade journaling and learning.
Example: "BULL signal 12 bars ago. Confidence: 68%, TCS: 0.42, DMA: -0.85"
Analysis : This was a bullish reversal (regular div) with good confidence, weak trend (TCS), but strong bearish momentum (DMA). The bet was that momentum would reverse — a counter-momentum play requiring exhaustion confirmation. Check if exhaustion was high at that time to justify the entry.
Track patterns:
Do your best trades have confidence >0.65?
Do low-TCS signals (<0.50) work better for you?
Are you more successful with-momentum (DMA aligned with signal) or counter-momentum?
Troubleshooting Guide
Problem: No Signals Appearing
Symptoms : Chart loads, dashboard shows metrics, but no divergence signals fire.
Diagnosis Checklist :
Check dashboard oscillator value : Is it crossing OB/OS levels (70/30)? If oscillator stays in 40-60 range constantly, it can't reach extremes needed for divergence detection.
Are pivots forming? : Look for local swing highs/lows on your chart. If price is in tight consolidation, pivots may not meet lookback/lookforward requirements.
Is spacing too tight? : Check "Last Signal" metrics — how many bars since last signal? If <12 and your min_bars_ANY is 12, spacing filter is blocking.
Is CAE blocking everything? : Check dashboard Statistics section — what's the blocked signal count? High blocks indicate overly strict filters.
Solutions :
Loosen OB/OS Temporarily :
Try 65/35 to verify divergence detection works
If signals appear, the issue was threshold strictness
Gradually tighten back to 67/33, then 70/30 as appropriate
Lower Min Confidence :
Try 0.25-0.30 (diagnostic level)
If signals appear, filter was too strict
Raise gradually to find sweet spot (0.35-0.45 typical)
Disable Strong Trend Filter Temporarily :
Turn off in CAE settings
If signals appear, TCS threshold was blocking everything
Re-enable and lower TCS_threshold to 0.70-0.75
Reduce Min Slope Change :
Try 0.7-0.8 (from default 1.0)
Allows weaker divergences through
Helpful on low-volatility instruments
Widen Spacing :
Set min_bars_ANY to 6-8
Set min_bars_SAME_SIDE to 12-16
Reduces time between allowed signals
Check Timing Mode :
If using Confirmed, remember there's a pivot_lookforward delay (5+ bars)
Switch to Realtime temporarily to verify system is working
Realtime has no delay but repaints
Verify Oscillator Settings :
Length 14 is standard but might not fit all instruments
Try length 9-11 for faster response
Try length 18-21 for slower, smoother response
Problem: Too Many Signals (Signal Spam)
Symptoms : Dashboard shows 50+ signals in Statistics, confidence scores mostly <0.40, signals clustering close together.
Solutions :
Raise Min Confidence :
Try 0.40-0.50 (quality filter)
Blocks bottom-tier setups
Targets top 50-60% of divergences only
Tighten OB/OS :
Use 70/30 or 75/25
Requires more extreme oscillator readings
Reduces false divergences in mid-range
Increase Min Slope Change :
Try 1.2-1.5 (from default 1.0)
Requires stronger, more obvious divergences
Filters marginal slope disagreements
Raise TCS Threshold :
Try 0.85-0.90 (from default 0.80)
Stricter trend filter blocks more counter-trend attempts
Favors only strongest trend alignment
Enable ALL CAE Gates :
Turn on Trend Filter + Adversarial + Confidence
Triple-layer protection
Blocks aggressively — expect 20-40% reduction in signals
Widen Spacing :
min_bars_ANY: 15-20 (from 12)
min_bars_SAME_SIDE: 30-40 (from 24)
Creates substantial breathing room
Switch to Confirmed Timing :
Removes realtime preview noise
Ensures full pivot validation
5-bar delay filters many false starts
Problem: Signals in Strong Trends Get Stopped Out
Symptoms : You take a bullish divergence in a downtrend (or bearish in uptrend), and it immediately fails. Dashboard showed high TCS at the time.
Analysis : This is INTENDED behavior — CAE is protecting you from low-probability counter-trend trades.
Understanding :
Check Last Signal Metrics in dashboard — what was TCS when signal fired?
If TCS was >0.85 and signal was counter-trend, CAE correctly identified it as high risk
Strong trends rarely reverse cleanly without major exhaustion
Your losses here are the system working as designed (blocking bad odds)
If You Want to Override (Not Recommended) :
Lower TCS_threshold to 0.70-0.75 (allows more counter-trend)
Lower exhaustion_required to 0.40 (easier override)
Disable Strong Trend Filter entirely (very risky)
Better Approach :
TRUST THE FILTER — it's preventing costly mistakes
Wait for exhaustion >0.75 (yellow shading) before counter-trending strong TCS
Focus on continuation signals (hidden divs) in high-TCS environments
Use Advisory mode to see what CAE is blocking and learn from outcomes
Problem: Adversarial Blocking Seems Wrong
Symptoms : You see a divergence that "looks good" visually, but CAE blocks with "Adversarial bearish/bullish" warning.
Diagnosis :
Check dashboard Bull Case and Bear Case scores at that moment
Look at Differential value
Check adversarial bar colors — was there strong coloring against your intended direction?
Understanding :
Adversarial catches "obvious" opposing momentum that's easy to miss
Example: Bullish divergence at a local low, BUT price is deeply below EMA50, bearish momentum is strong, and RSI shows knife-catching conditions
Bull Case might be 0.20 while Bear Case is 0.55
Differential = -0.35, far beyond threshold
Block is CORRECT — you'd be fighting overwhelming opposing flow
If You Disagree Consistently
Review blocked signals on chart — scroll back and check outcomes
Did those blocked signals actually work, or did they fail as adversarial predicted?
Raise adv_threshold to 0.15-0.20 (more permissive, allows closer battles)
Disable Adversarial Validation temporarily (diagnostic) to isolate its effect
Use Advisory mode to learn adversarial patterns over 50-100 signals
Remember : Adversarial is conservative BY DESIGN. It prevents "obvious" bad trades where you're fighting strong strength the other way.
Problem: Dashboard Not Showing or Incomplete
Solutions :
Toggle "Show Dashboard" to ON in settings
Try different dashboard sizes (Small/Normal/Large)
Try different positions (Top Left/Right, Bottom Left/Right) — might be off-screen
Some sections require CAE Enable = ON (Cognitive Engine section won't appear if CAE is disabled)
Statistics section requires at least 1 lifetime signal to populate
Check that visual theme is set (dashboard colors adapt to theme)
Problem: Performance Lag, Chart Freezing
Symptoms : Chart loading is slow, indicator calculations cause delays, pinch-to-zoom lags.
Diagnosis : Visual features are computationally expensive, especially adversarial bar coloring (recalculates every bar).
Solutions (In Order of Impact) :
Disable Adversarial Bar Coloring (MOST EXPENSIVE):
Turn OFF "Adversarial Bar Coloring" in settings
This is the single biggest performance drain
Immediate improvement
Reduce Vertical Lines :
Lower "Keep last N vertical lines" to 20-30
Or set to 0 to disable entirely
Moderate improvement
Disable Bifurcation Zones :
Turn OFF "Draw Bifurcation Zones"
Reduces box drawing calculations
Moderate improvement
Set Dashboard Size to Small :
Smaller dashboard = fewer cells = less rendering
Minor improvement
Use Shorter Max Lookback :
Reduce max_lookback to 40-50 (from 60+)
Fewer bars to scan for divergences
Minor improvement
Disable Exhaustion Shading :
Turn OFF "Show Market State"
Removes background coloring calculations
Minor improvement
Extreme Performance Mode :
Disable ALL visual enhancements
Keep only triangle markers
Dashboard Small or OFF
Use Minimal theme if available
Problem: Realtime Signals Repainting
Symptoms : You see a signal appear, but on next bar it disappears or moves.
Explanation :
Realtime mode detects peaks 1 bar ago: high > high AND high > high
On the FORMING bar (before close), this condition can change as new prices arrive
Example: At 10:05, high (10:04 bar) was 100, current high is 99 → peak detected
At 10:05:30, new high of 101 arrives → peak condition breaks → signal disappears
At 10:06 (bar close), final high is 101 → no peak at 10:04 anymore → signal gone permanently
This is expected behavior for realtime responsiveness. You get preview/early warning, but it's not locked until bar confirms.
Solutions :
Use Confirmed Timing :
Switch to "Confirmed (lookforward)" mode
ZERO repainting — pivot must be fully validated
5-bar delay (pivot_lookforward)
What you see in history is exactly what would have appeared live
Accept Realtime Repaint as Tradeoff :
Keep Realtime mode for speed and alerts
Understand that pre-confirmation signals may vanish
Only trade signals that CONFIRM at bar close (check barstate.isconfirmed)
Use for live monitoring, NOT for backtesting
Trade Only After Confirmation :
In Realtime mode, wait 1 full bar after signal appears before entering
If signal survives that bar close, it's locked
This adds 1-bar delay but removes repaint risk
Recommendation : Use Confirmed for backtesting and conservative trading. Use Realtime only for active monitoring with full understanding of preview behavior.
Risk Management Integration
BZ-CAE is a signal generation system, not a complete trading strategy. You must integrate proper risk management:
Position Sizing by Confidence
Confidence 0.70-1.00 (Premium) :
Risk: 1.5-2.0% of account (MAXIMUM)
Reasoning: High-quality setup across all factors
Still cap at 2% — even premium setups can fail
Confidence 0.50-0.70 (High Quality) :
Risk: 1.0-1.5% of account
Reasoning: Standard good setup
Your bread-and-butter risk level
Confidence 0.35-0.50 (Moderate Quality) :
Risk: 0.5-1.0% of account
Reasoning: Marginal setup, passes minimum threshold
Reduce size or skip if you're selective
Confidence <0.35 (Low Quality) :
Risk: 0% (blocked in Filtering mode)
Reasoning: Insufficient quality factors
System protects you by not showing these
Stop Placement Strategies
For Reversal Signals (Regular Divergences) :
Place stop beyond the divergence pivot plus buffer
Bullish : Stop below the divergence low - 1.0-1.5 × ATR
Bearish : Stop above the divergence high + 1.0-1.5 × ATR
Reasoning: If price breaks the pivot, divergence structure is invalidated
For Continuation Signals (Hidden Divergences) :
Place stop beyond recent swing in opposite direction
Bullish continuation : Stop below recent swing low (not the divergence pivot itself)
Bearish continuation : Stop above recent swing high
Reasoning: You're trading with trend, allow more breathing room
ATR-Based Stops :
1.5-2.0 × ATR is standard
Scale by timeframe:
Scalping (1-5m): 1.0-1.5 × ATR (tight)
Day trading (15m-1H): 1.5-2.0 × ATR (balanced)
Swing (4H-D): 2.0-3.0 × ATR (wide)
Never Use Fixed Dollar/Pip Stops :
Markets have different volatility
50-pip stop on EUR/USD ≠ 50-pip stop on GBP/JPY
Always normalize by ATR or pivot structure
Profit Targets and Scaling
Primary Target :
2-3 × ATR from entry (minimum 2:1 reward-risk)
Example : Entry at 100, ATR = 2, stop at 97 (1.5 × ATR) → target at 106 (3 × ATR) = 2:1 R:R
Scaling Out Strategy :
Take 50% off at 1.5 × ATR (secure partial profit)
Move stop to breakeven
Trail remaining 50% with 1.0 × ATR trailing stop
Let winners run if trend persists
Targets by Confidence :
High Confidence (>0.70) : Aggressive targets (3-4 × ATR), trail wider (1.5 × ATR)
Standard Confidence (0.50-0.70) : Normal targets (2-3 × ATR), standard trail (1.0 × ATR)
Low Confidence (0.35-0.50) : Conservative targets (1.5-2 × ATR), tight trail (0.75 × ATR)
Use Bifurcation Zones :
If opposite-side zone is visible on chart (from previous signal), use it as target
Example : Bullish signal at 100, prior supply zone at 110 → use 110 as target
Zones mark institutional resistance/support
Exhaustion-Based Exits :
If you're in a trade and exhaustion >0.75 develops (yellow shading), consider early exit
Market is overextended — reversal risk is high
Take profit even if target not reached
Trade Management by TCS
High TCS + Counter-Trend Trade (Risky) :
Use very tight stops (1.0-1.5 × ATR)
Conservative targets (1.5-2 × ATR)
Quick exit if trade doesn't work immediately
You're fading momentum — respect it
Low TCS + Reversal Trade (Safer) :
Use wider stops (2.0-2.5 × ATR)
Aggressive targets (3-4 × ATR)
Trail with patience
Genuine reversal potential in weak trend
High TCS + Continuation Trade (Safest) :
Standard stops (1.5-2.0 × ATR)
Very aggressive targets (4-5 × ATR)
Trail wide (1.5-2.0 × ATR)
You're with institutional momentum — let it run
Educational Value — Learning Machine Intelligence
BZ-CAE is designed as a learning platform, not just a tool:
Advisory Mode as Teacher
Most indicators are binary: signal or no signal. You don't learn WHY certain setups are better.
BZ-CAE's Advisory mode shows you EVERY potential divergence, then annotates the ones that would be blocked in Filtering mode with specific reasons:
"Bull: strong downtrend (TCS=0.87)" teaches you that TCS >0.85 makes counter-trend very risky
"Adversarial bearish" teaches you that the opposing case was dominating
"Low confidence 32%" teaches you that the setup lacked quality across multiple factors
"Bull spacing: wait 8 bars" teaches you that signals need breathing room
After 50-100 signals in Advisory mode, you internalize the CAE's decision logic. You start seeing these factors yourself BEFORE the indicator does.
Dashboard Transparency
Most "intelligent" indicators are black boxes — you don't know how they make decisions.
BZ-CAE shows you ALL metrics in real-time:
TCS tells you trend strength
DMA tells you momentum alignment
Exhaustion tells you overextension
Adversarial shows both sides of the debate
Confidence shows composite quality
You learn to interpret market state holistically, a skill applicable to ANY trading system beyond this indicator.
Divergence Quality Education
Not all divergences are equal. BZ-CAE teaches you which conditions produce high-probability setups:
Quality divergence : Regular bullish div at a low, TCS <0.50 (weak trend), exhaustion >0.75 (overextended), positive adversarial differential, confidence >0.70
Low-quality divergence : Regular bearish div at a high, TCS >0.85 (strong uptrend), exhaustion <0.30 (not overextended), negative adversarial differential, confidence <0.40
After using the system, you can evaluate divergences manually with similar intelligence.
Risk Management Discipline
Confidence-based position sizing teaches you to adjust risk based on setup quality, not emotions:
Beginners often size all trades identically
Or worse, size UP on marginal setups to "make up" for losses
BZ-CAE forces systematic sizing: premium setups get larger size, marginal setups get smaller size
This creates a probabilistic approach where your edge compounds over time.
What This Indicator Is NOT
Complete transparency about limitations and positioning:
Not a Prediction System
BZ-CAE does not predict future prices. It identifies structural divergences (price-momentum disagreements) and assesses current market state (trend, exhaustion, adversarial conditions). It tells you WHEN conditions favor a potential reversal or continuation, not WHAT WILL HAPPEN.
Markets are probabilistic. Even premium-confidence setups fail ~30-40% of the time. The system improves your probability distribution over many trades — it doesn't eliminate risk.
Not Fully Automated
This is a decision support tool, not a trading robot. You must:
Execute trades manually based on signals
Manage positions (stops, targets, trailing)
Apply discretionary judgment (news events, liquidity, context)
Integrate with your broader strategy and risk rules
The confidence scores guide position sizing, but YOU determine final risk allocation based on your account size, risk tolerance, and portfolio context.
Not Beginner-Friendly
BZ-CAE requires understanding of:
Divergence trading concepts (regular vs hidden, reversal vs continuation)
Market state interpretation (trend vs range, momentum, exhaustion)
Basic technical analysis (pivots, support/resistance, EMAs)
Risk management fundamentals (position sizing, stops, R:R)
This is designed for intermediate to advanced traders willing to invest time learning the system. If you want "buy the arrow" simplicity, this isn't the tool.
Not a Holy Grail
There is no perfect indicator. BZ-CAE filters noise and improves signal quality significantly, but:
Losing trades are inevitable (even at 70% win rate, 30% still fail)
Market conditions change rapidly (yesterday's strong trend becomes today's chop)
Black swan events occur (fundamentals override technicals)
Execution matters (slippage, fees, emotional discipline)
The system provides an EDGE, not a guarantee. Your job is to execute that edge consistently with proper risk management over hundreds of trades.
Not Financial Advice
BZ-CAE is an educational and analytical tool. All trading decisions are your responsibility. Past performance (backtested or live) does not guarantee future results. Only risk capital you can afford to lose. Consult a licensed financial advisor for investment advice specific to your situation.
Ideal Market Conditions
Best Performance Characteristics
Liquid Instruments :
Major forex pairs (EUR/USD, GBP/USD, USD/JPY)
Large-cap stocks and index ETFs (SPY, QQQ, AAPL, MSFT)
High-volume crypto (BTC, ETH)
Major commodities (Gold, Oil, Natural Gas)
Reasoning: Clean price structure, clear pivots, meaningful oscillator behavior
Trending with Consolidations :
Markets that trend for 20-40 bars, then consolidate 10-20 bars, repeat
Creates divergences at consolidation boundaries (reversals) and within trends (continuations)
Both regular and hidden divs find opportunities
5-Minute to Daily Timeframes :
Below 5m: too much noise, false pivots, CAE metrics unstable
Above daily: too few signals, edge diminishes (fundamentals dominate)
Sweet spot: 15m to 4H for most traders
Consistent Volume and Participation :
Regular trading sessions (not holidays or thin markets)
Predictable volatility patterns
Avoid instruments with sudden gaps or circuit breakers
Challenging Conditions
Extremely Low Liquidity :
Penny stocks, exotic forex pairs, low-volume crypto
Erratic pivots, unreliable oscillator readings
CAE metrics can't assess market state properly
Very Low Timeframes (1-Minute or Below) :
Dominated by market microstructure noise
Divergences are everywhere but meaningless
CAE filtering helps but still unreliable
Extended Sideways Consolidation :
100+ bars of tight range with no clear pivots
Oscillator hugs midpoint (45-55 range)
No divergences to detect
Fundamentally-Driven Gap Markets :
Earnings releases, economic data, geopolitical events
Price gaps over stops and targets
Technical structure breaks down
Recommendation: Disable trading around known events
Calculation Methodology — Technical Depth
For users who want to understand the math:
Oscillator Computation
Each oscillator type calculates differently, but all normalize to 0-100:
RSI : ta.rsi(close, length) — Standard Relative Strength Index
Stochastic : ta.stoch(high, low, close, length) — %K calculation
CCI : (ta.cci(hlc3, length) + 100) / 2 — Normalized from -100/+100 to 0-100
MFI : ta.mfi(hlc3, length) — Volume-weighted RSI equivalent
Williams %R : ta.wpr(length) + 100 — Inverted stochastic adjusted to 0-100
Smoothing: If smoothing > 1, apply ta.sma(oscillator, smoothing)
Divergence Detection Algorithm
Identify Pivots :
Price high pivot: ta.pivothigh(high, lookback, lookforward)
Price low pivot: ta.pivotlow(low, lookback, lookforward)
Oscillator high pivot: ta.pivothigh(osc, lookback, lookforward)
Oscillator low pivot: ta.pivotlow(osc, lookback, lookforward)
Store Recent Pivots :
Maintain arrays of last 10 pivots with bar indices
When new pivot confirmed, unshift to array, pop oldest if >10
Scan for Slope Disagreements :
Loop through last 5 pivots
For each pair (current pivot, historical pivot):
Check if within max_lookback bars
Calculate slopes: (current - historical) / bars_between
Regular bearish: price_slope > 0, osc_slope < 0, |osc_slope| > min_threshold
Regular bullish: price_slope < 0, osc_slope > 0, |osc_slope| > min_threshold
Hidden bearish: price_slope < 0, osc_slope > 0, osc_slope > min_threshold
Hidden bullish: price_slope > 0, osc_slope < 0, |osc_slope| > min_threshold
Important Disclaimers and Terms
Performance Disclosure
Past performance, whether backtested or live-traded, does not guarantee future results. Markets change. What works today may not work tomorrow. Hypothetical or simulated performance results have inherent limitations and do not represent actual trading.
Risk of Loss
Trading involves substantial risk of loss. Only trade with risk capital you can afford to lose entirely. The high degree of leverage often available in trading can work against you as well as for you. Leveraged trading may result in losses exceeding your initial deposit.
Not Financial Advice
BZ-CAE is an educational and analytical tool for technical analysis. It is not financial advice, investment advice, or a recommendation to buy or sell any security or instrument. All trading decisions are your sole responsibility. Consult a licensed financial advisor for advice specific to your circumstances.
Technical Indicator Limitations
BZ-CAE is a technical analysis tool based on price and volume data. It does not account for:
Fundamental analysis (earnings, economic data, financial health)
Market sentiment and positioning
Geopolitical events and news
Liquidity conditions and market microstructure changes
Regulatory changes or exchange rules
Integrate with broader analysis and strategy. Do not rely solely on technical indicators for trading decisions.
Repainting Acknowledgment
As disclosed throughout this documentation:
Realtime mode may repaint on forming bars before confirmation (by design for preview functionality)
Confirmed mode has zero repainting (fully validated pivots only)
Choose timing mode appropriate for your use case. Understand the tradeoffs.
Testing Recommendation
ALWAYS test on demo/paper accounts before committing real capital. Validate the indicator's behavior on your specific instruments and timeframes. Learn the system thoroughly in Advisory mode before using Filtering mode.
Learning Resources :
In-indicator tooltips (hover over setting names for detailed explanations)
This comprehensive publishing statement (save for reference)
User guide in script comments (top of code)
Final Word — Philosophy of BZ-CAE
BZ-CAE is not designed to replace your judgment — it's designed to enhance it.
The indicator identifies structural inflection points (bifurcations) where price and momentum disagree. The Cognitive Engine evaluates market state to determine if this disagreement is meaningful or noise. The Adversarial model debates both sides of the trade to catch obvious bad setups. The Confidence system ranks quality so you can choose your risk appetite.
But YOU still execute. YOU still manage risk. YOU still learn from outcomes.
This is intelligence amplification, not intelligence replacement.
Use Advisory mode to learn how expert traders evaluate market state. Use Filtering mode to enforce discipline when emotions run high. Use the dashboard to develop a systematic approach to reading markets. Use confidence scores to size positions probabilistically.
The system provides an edge. Your job is to execute that edge with discipline, patience, and proper risk management over hundreds of trades.
Markets are probabilistic. No system wins every trade. But a systematic edge + disciplined execution + proper risk management compounds over time. That's the path to consistent profitability. BZ-CAE gives you the edge. The discipline and risk management are on you.
Taking you to school. — Dskyz, Trade with insight. Trade with anticipation.
RSI Overbought/Oversold + Divergence Indicator (new)//@version=5
indicator('CryptoSignalScanner - RSI Overbought/Oversold + Divergence Indicator (new)',
//---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
//--- Define Colors ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
//---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
vWhite = #FFFFFF
vViolet = #C77DF3
vIndigo = #8A2BE2
vBlue = #009CDF
vGreen = #5EBD3E
vYellow = #FFB900
vRed = #E23838
longColor = color.green
shortColor = color.red
textColor = color.white
bullishColor = color.rgb(38,166,154,0) //Used in the display table
bearishColor = color.rgb(239,83,79,0) //Used in the display table
nomatchColor = color.silver //Used in the display table
//---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
//--- Functions--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
//---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TF2txt(TF) =>
switch TF
"S" => "RSI 1s:"
"5S" => "RSI 5s:"
"10S" => "RSI 10s:"
"15S" => "RSI 15s:"
"30S" => "RSI 30s"
"1" => "RSI 1m:"
"3" => "RSI 3m:"
"5" => "RSI 5m:"
"15" => "RSI 15m:"
"30" => "RSI 30m"
"45" => "RSI 45m"
"60" => "RSI 1h:"
"120" => "RSI 2h:"
"180" => "RSI 3h:"
"240" => "RSI 4h:"
"480" => "RSI 8h:"
"D" => "RSI 1D:"
"1D" => "RSI 1D:"
"2D" => "RSI 2D:"
"3D" => "RSI 2D:"
"3D" => "RSI 3W:"
"W" => "RSI 1W:"
"1W" => "RSI 1W:"
"M" => "RSI 1M:"
"1M" => "RSI 1M:"
"3M" => "RSI 3M:"
"6M" => "RSI 6M:"
"12M" => "RSI 12M:"
//---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
//--- Show/Hide Settings ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
//---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
rsiShowInput = input(true, title='Show RSI', group='Show/Hide Settings')
maShowInput = input(false, title='Show MA', group='Show/Hide Settings')
showRSIMAInput = input(true, title='Show RSIMA Cloud', group='Show/Hide Settings')
rsiBandShowInput = input(true, title='Show Oversold/Overbought Lines', group='Show/Hide Settings')
rsiBandExtShowInput = input(true, title='Show Oversold/Overbought Extended Lines', group='Show/Hide Settings')
rsiHighlightShowInput = input(true, title='Show Oversold/Overbought Highlight Lines', group='Show/Hide Settings')
DivergenceShowInput = input(true, title='Show RSI Divergence Labels', group='Show/Hide Settings')
//---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
//--- Table Settings --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
//---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
rsiShowTable = input(true, title='Show RSI Table Information box', group="RSI Table Settings")
rsiTablePosition = input.string(title='Location', defval='middle_right', options= , group="RSI Table Settings", inline='1')
rsiTextSize = input.string(title=' Size', defval='small', options= , group="RSI Table Settings", inline='1')
rsiShowTF1 = input(true, title='Show TimeFrame1', group="RSI Table Settings", inline='tf1')
rsiTF1 = input.timeframe("15", title=" Time", group="RSI Table Settings", inline='tf1')
rsiShowTF2 = input(true, title='Show TimeFrame2', group="RSI Table Settings", inline='tf2')
rsiTF2 = input.timeframe("60", title=" Time", group="RSI Table Settings", inline='tf2')
rsiShowTF3 = input(true, title='Show TimeFrame3', group="RSI Table Settings", inline='tf3')
rsiTF3 = input.timeframe("240", title=" Time", group="RSI Table Settings", inline='tf3')
rsiShowTF4 = input(true, title='Show TimeFrame4', group="RSI Table Settings", inline='tf4')
rsiTF4 = input.timeframe("D", title=" Time", group="RSI Table Settings", inline='tf4')
rsiShowHist = input(true, title='Show RSI Historical Columns', group="RSI Table Settings", tooltip='Show the information of the 2 previous closed candles')
//---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
//--- RSI Input Settings ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
//---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
rsiSourceInput = input.source(close, 'Source', group='RSI Settings')
rsiLengthInput = input.int(14, minval=1, title='RSI Length', group='RSI Settings', tooltip='Here we set the RSI lenght')
rsiColorInput = input.color(#26a69a, title="RSI Color", group='RSI Settings')
rsimaColorInput = input.color(#ef534f, title="RSIMA Color", group='RSI Settings')
rsiBandColorInput = input.color(#787B86, title="RSI Band Color", group='RSI Settings')
rsiUpperBandExtInput = input.int(title='RSI Overbought Extended Line', defval=80, minval=50, maxval=100, group='RSI Settings')
rsiUpperBandInput = input.int(title='RSI Overbought Line', defval=70, minval=50, maxval=100, group='RSI Settings')
rsiLowerBandInput = input.int(title='RSI Oversold Line', defval=30, minval=0, maxval=50, group='RSI Settings')
rsiLowerBandExtInput = input.int(title='RSI Oversold Extended Line', defval=20, minval=0, maxval=50, group='RSI Settings')
//---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
//--- MA Input Settings -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
//---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
maTypeInput = input.string("EMA", title="MA Type", options= , group="MA Settings")
maLengthInput = input.int(14, title="MA Length", group="MA Settings")
maColorInput = input.color(color.yellow, title="MA Color", group='MA Settings') //#7E57C2
//---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
//--- Divergence Input Settings ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
//---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
lbrInput = input(title="Pivot Lookback Right", defval=2, group='RSI Divergence Settings')
lblInput = input(title="Pivot Lookback Left", defval=2, group='RSI Divergence Settings')
lbRangeMaxInput = input(title="Max of Lookback Range", defval=10, group='RSI Divergence Settings')
lbRangeMinInput = input(title="Min of Lookback Range", defval=2, group='RSI Divergence Settings')
plotBullInput = input(title="Plot Bullish", defval=true, group='RSI Divergence Settings')
plotHiddenBullInput = input(title="Plot Hidden Bullish", defval=true, group='RSI Divergence Settings')
plotBearInput = input(title="Plot Bearish", defval=true, group='RSI Divergence Settings')
plotHiddenBearInput = input(title="Plot Hidden Bearish", defval=true, group='RSI Divergence Settings')
//---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
//--- RSI Calculation -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
//---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
rsi = ta.rsi(rsiSourceInput, rsiLengthInput)
rsiprevious = rsi
= request.security(syminfo.tickerid, rsiTF1, [rsi, rsi , rsi ], lookahead=barmerge.lookahead_on)
= request.security(syminfo.tickerid, rsiTF2, [rsi, rsi , rsi ], lookahead=barmerge.lookahead_on)
= request.security(syminfo.tickerid, rsiTF3, [rsi, rsi , rsi ], lookahead=barmerge.lookahead_on)
= request.security(syminfo.tickerid, rsiTF4, [rsi, rsi , rsi ], lookahead=barmerge.lookahead_on)
//---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
//--- MA Calculation -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
//---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ma(source, length, type) =>
switch type
"SMA" => ta.sma(source, length)
"Bollinger Bands" => ta.sma(source, length)
"EMA" => ta.ema(source, length)
"SMMA (RMA)" => ta.rma(source, length)
"WMA" => ta.wma(source, length)
"VWMA" => ta.vwma(source, length)
rsiMA = ma(rsi, maLengthInput, maTypeInput)
rsiMAPrevious = rsiMA
//---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
//--- Stoch RSI Settings + Calculation --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
//---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
showStochRSI = input(false, title="Show Stochastic RSI", group='Stochastic RSI Settings')
smoothK = input.int(title="Stochastic K", defval=3, minval=1, maxval=10, group='Stochastic RSI Settings')
smoothD = input.int(title="Stochastic D", defval=4, minval=1, maxval=10, group='Stochastic RSI Settings')
lengthRSI = input.int(title="Stochastic RSI Lenght", defval=14, minval=1, group='Stochastic RSI Settings')
lengthStoch = input.int(title="Stochastic Lenght", defval=14, minval=1, group='Stochastic RSI Settings')
colorK = input.color(color.rgb(41,98,255,0), title="K Color", group='Stochastic RSI Settings', inline="1")
colorD = input.color(color.rgb(205,109,0,0), title="D Color", group='Stochastic RSI Settings', inline="1")
StochRSI = ta.rsi(rsiSourceInput, lengthRSI)
k = ta.sma(ta.stoch(StochRSI, StochRSI, StochRSI, lengthStoch), smoothK) //Blue Line
d = ta.sma(k, smoothD) //Red Line
//---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
//--- Divergence Settings ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
//---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
bearColor = color.red
bullColor = color.green
hiddenBullColor = color.new(color.green, 50)
hiddenBearColor = color.new(color.red, 50)
//textColor = color.white
noneColor = color.new(color.white, 100)
osc = rsi
plFound = na(ta.pivotlow(osc, lblInput, lbrInput)) ? false : true
phFound = na(ta.pivothigh(osc, lblInput, lbrInput)) ? false : true
_inRange(cond) =>
bars = ta.barssince(cond == true)
lbRangeMinInput <= bars and bars <= lbRangeMaxInput
//---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
//--- Define Plot & Line Colors ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
//---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
rsiColor = rsi >= rsiMA ? rsiColorInput : rsimaColorInput
//---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
//--- Plot Lines ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
//---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Create a horizontal line at a specific price level
myLine = line.new(bar_index , 75, bar_index, 75, color = color.rgb(187, 14, 14), width = 2)
bottom = line.new(bar_index , 50, bar_index, 50, color = color.rgb(223, 226, 28), width = 2)
mymainLine = line.new(bar_index , 60, bar_index, 60, color = color.rgb(13, 154, 10), width = 3)
hline(50, title='RSI Baseline', color=color.new(rsiBandColorInput, 50), linestyle=hline.style_solid, editable=false)
hline(rsiBandExtShowInput ? rsiUpperBandExtInput : na, title='RSI Upper Band', color=color.new(rsiBandColorInput, 10), linestyle=hline.style_dashed, editable=false)
hline(rsiBandShowInput ? rsiUpperBandInput : na, title='RSI Upper Band', color=color.new(rsiBandColorInput, 10), linestyle=hline.style_dashed, editable=false)
hline(rsiBandShowInput ? rsiLowerBandInput : na, title='RSI Upper Band', color=color.new(rsiBandColorInput, 10), linestyle=hline.style_dashed, editable=false)
hline(rsiBandExtShowInput ? rsiLowerBandExtInput : na, title='RSI Upper Band', color=color.new(rsiBandColorInput, 10), linestyle=hline.style_dashed, editable=false)
bgcolor(rsiHighlightShowInput ? rsi >= rsiUpperBandExtInput ? color.new(rsiColorInput, 70) : na : na, title="Show Extended Oversold Highlight", editable=false)
bgcolor(rsiHighlightShowInput ? rsi >= rsiUpperBandInput ? rsi < rsiUpperBandExtInput ? color.new(#64ffda, 90) : na : na: na, title="Show Overbought Highlight", editable=false)
bgcolor(rsiHighlightShowInput ? rsi <= rsiLowerBandInput ? rsi > rsiLowerBandExtInput ? color.new(#F43E32, 90) : na : na : na, title="Show Extended Oversold Highlight", editable=false)
bgcolor(rsiHighlightShowInput ? rsi <= rsiLowerBandInput ? color.new(rsimaColorInput, 70) : na : na, title="Show Oversold Highlight", editable=false)
maPlot = plot(maShowInput ? rsiMA : na, title='MA', color=color.new(maColorInput,0), linewidth=1)
rsiMAPlot = plot(showRSIMAInput ? rsiMA : na, title="RSI EMA", color=color.new(rsimaColorInput,0), editable=false, display=display.none)
rsiPlot = plot(rsiShowInput ? rsi : na, title='RSI', color=color.new(rsiColor,0), linewidth=1)
fill(rsiPlot, rsiMAPlot, color=color.new(rsiColor, 60), title="RSIMA Cloud")
plot(showStochRSI ? k : na, title='Stochastic K', color=colorK, linewidth=1)
plot(showStochRSI ? d : na, title='Stochastic D', color=colorD, linewidth=1)
//---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
//--- Plot Divergence -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
//---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Regular Bullish
// Osc: Higher Low
oscHL = osc > ta.valuewhen(plFound, osc , 1) and _inRange(plFound )
// Price: Lower Low
priceLL = low < ta.valuewhen(plFound, low , 1)
bullCond = plotBullInput and priceLL and oscHL and plFound
plot(
plFound ? osc : na,
offset=-lbrInput,
title="Regular Bullish",
linewidth=2,
color=(bullCond ? bullColor : noneColor)
)
plotshape(
DivergenceShowInput ? bullCond ? osc : na : na,
offset=-lbrInput,
title="Regular Bullish Label",
text=" Bull ",
style=shape.labelup,
location=location.absolute,
color=bullColor,
textcolor=textColor
)
//------------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Hidden Bullish
// Osc: Lower Low
oscLL = osc < ta.valuewhen(plFound, osc , 1) and _inRange(plFound )
// Price: Higher Low
priceHL = low > ta.valuewhen(plFound, low , 1)
hiddenBullCond = plotHiddenBullInput and priceHL and oscLL and plFound
plot(
plFound ? osc : na,
offset=-lbrInput,
title="Hidden Bullish",
linewidth=2,
color=(hiddenBullCond ? hiddenBullColor : noneColor)
)
plotshape(
DivergenceShowInput ? hiddenBullCond ? osc : na : na,
offset=-lbrInput,
title="Hidden Bullish Label",
text=" H Bull ",
style=shape.labelup,
location=location.absolute,
color=bullColor,
textcolor=textColor
)
//------------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Regular Bearish
// Osc: Lower High
oscLH = osc < ta.valuewhen(phFound, osc , 1) and _inRange(phFound )
// Price: Higher High
priceHH = high > ta.valuewhen(phFound, high , 1)
bearCond = plotBearInput and priceHH and oscLH and phFound
plot(
phFound ? osc : na,
offset=-lbrInput,
title="Regular Bearish",
linewidth=2,
color=(bearCond ? bearColor : noneColor)
)
plotshape(
DivergenceShowInput ? bearCond ? osc : na : na,
offset=-lbrInput,
title="Regular Bearish Label",
text=" Bear ",
style=shape.labeldown,
location=location.absolute,
color=bearColor,
textcolor=textColor
)
//------------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Hidden Bearish
// Osc: Higher High
oscHH = osc > ta.valuewhen(phFound, osc , 1) and _inRange(phFound )
// Price: Lower High
priceLH = high < ta.valuewhen(phFound, high , 1)
hiddenBearCond = plotHiddenBearInput and priceLH and oscHH and phFound
plot(
phFound ? osc : na,
offset=-lbrInput,
title="Hidden Bearish",
linewidth=2,
color=(hiddenBearCond ? hiddenBearColor : noneColor)
)
plotshape(
DivergenceShowInput ? hiddenBearCond ? osc : na : na,
offset=-lbrInput,
title="Hidden Bearish Label",
text=" H Bear ",
style=shape.labeldown,
location=location.absolute,
color=bearColor,
textcolor=textColor
)
//---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
//--- Check RSI Lineup ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
//---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
bullTF = rsi > rsi and rsi > rsi
bearTF = rsi < rsi and rsi < rsi
bullTF1 = rsi1 > rsi1_1 and rsi1_1 > rsi1_2
bearTF1 = rsi1 < rsi1_1 and rsi1_1 < rsi1_2
bullTF2 = rsi2 > rsi2_1 and rsi2_1 > rsi2_2
bearTF2 = rsi2 < rsi2_1 and rsi2_1 < rsi2_2
bullTF3 = rsi3 > rsi3_1 and rsi3_1 > rsi3_2
bearTF3 = rsi3 < rsi3_1 and rsi3_1 < rsi3_2
bullTF4 = rsi4 > rsi4_1 and rsi4_1 > rsi4_2
bearTF4 = rsi4 < rsi4_1 and rsi4_1 < rsi4_2
bbTxt(bull,bear) =>
bull ? "BULLISH" : bear ? "BEARISCH" : 'NO LINEUP'
bbColor(bull,bear) =>
bull ? bullishColor : bear ? bearishColor : nomatchColor
newTC(tBox, col, row, txt, width, txtColor, bgColor, txtHA, txtSize) =>
table.cell(table_id=tBox,column=col, row=row, text=txt, width=width,text_color=txtColor,bgcolor=bgColor, text_halign=txtHA, text_size=txtSize)
//---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
//--- Define RSI Table Setting ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
//---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
width_c0 = 0
width_c1 = 0
if rsiShowTable
var tBox = table.new(position=rsiTablePosition, columns=5, rows=6, bgcolor=color.rgb(18,22,33,50), frame_color=color.black, frame_width=1, border_color=color.black, border_width=1)
newTC(tBox, 0,1,"RSI Current",width_c0,color.orange,color.rgb(0,0,0,100),'right',rsiTextSize)
newTC(tBox, 1,1,str.format(" {0,number,#.##} ", rsi),width_c0,vWhite,rsi < 50 ? bearishColor:bullishColor,'left',rsiTextSize)
newTC(tBox, 4,1,bbTxt(bullTF, bearTF),width_c0,vWhite,bbColor(bullTF, bearTF),'center',rsiTextSize)
if rsiShowHist
newTC(tBox, 2,1,str.format(" {0,number,#.##} ", rsi ),width_c0,vWhite,rsi < 50 ? bearishColor:bullishColor,'left',rsiTextSize)
newTC(tBox, 3,1,str.format(" {0,number,#.##} ", rsi ),width_c0,vWhite,rsi < 50 ? bearishColor:bullishColor,'left',rsiTextSize)
if rsiShowTF1
newTC(tBox, 0,2,TF2txt(rsiTF1),width_c0,vWhite,color.rgb(0,0,0,100),'right',rsiTextSize)
newTC(tBox, 1,2,str.format(" {0,number,#.##} ", rsi1),width_c0,vWhite,rsi1 < 50 ? bearishColor:bullishColor,'left',rsiTextSize)
newTC(tBox, 4,2,bbTxt(bullTF1, bearTF1),width_c0,vWhite,bbColor(bullTF1,bearTF1),'center',rsiTextSize)
if rsiShowHist
newTC(tBox, 2,2,str.format(" {0,number,#.##} ", rsi1_1),width_c0,vWhite,rsi1_1 < 50 ? bearishColor:bullishColor,'left',rsiTextSize)
newTC(tBox, 3,2,str.format(" {0,number,#.##} ", rsi1_2),width_c0,vWhite,rsi1_2 < 50 ? bearishColor:bullishColor,'left',rsiTextSize)
if rsiShowTF2
newTC(tBox, 0,3,TF2txt(rsiTF2),width_c0,vWhite,color.rgb(0,0,0,100),'right',rsiTextSize)
newTC(tBox, 1,3,str.format(" {0,number,#.##} ", rsi2),width_c0,vWhite,rsi2 < 50 ? bearishColor:bullishColor,'left',rsiTextSize)
newTC(tBox, 4,3,bbTxt(bullTF2, bearTF2),width_c0,vWhite,bbColor(bullTF2,bearTF2),'center',rsiTextSize)
if rsiShowHist
newTC(tBox, 2,3,str.format(" {0,number,#.##} ", rsi2_1),width_c0,vWhite,rsi2_1 < 50 ? bearishColor:bullishColor,'left',rsiTextSize)
newTC(tBox, 3,3,str.format(" {0,number,#.##} ", rsi2_2),width_c0,vWhite,rsi2_2 < 50 ? bearishColor:bullishColor,'left',rsiTextSize)
if rsiShowTF3
newTC(tBox, 0,4,TF2txt(rsiTF3),width_c0,vWhite,color.rgb(0,0,0,100),'right',rsiTextSize)
newTC(tBox, 1,4,str.format(" {0,number,#.##} ", rsi3),width_c0,vWhite,rsi3 < 50 ? bearishColor:bullishColor,'left',rsiTextSize)
newTC(tBox, 4,4,bbTxt(bullTF3, bearTF3),width_c0,vWhite,bbColor(bullTF3,bearTF3),'center',rsiTextSize)
if rsiShowHist
newTC(tBox, 2,4,str.format(" {0,number,#.##} ", rsi3_1),width_c0,vWhite,rsi3_1 < 50 ? bearishColor:bullishColor,'left',rsiTextSize)
newTC(tBox, 3,4,str.format(" {0,number,#.##} ", rsi3_2),width_c0,vWhite,rsi3_2 < 50 ? bearishColor:bullishColor,'left',rsiTextSize)
if rsiShowTF4
newTC(tBox, 0,5,TF2txt(rsiTF4),width_c0,vWhite,color.rgb(0,0,0,100),'right',rsiTextSize)
newTC(tBox, 1,5,str.format(" {0,number,#.##} ", rsi4),width_c0,vWhite,rsi4 < 50 ? bearishColor:bullishColor,'left',rsiTextSize)
newTC(tBox, 4,5,bbTxt(bullTF4, bearTF4),width_c0,vWhite,bbColor(bullTF4,bearTF4),'center',rsiTextSize)
if rsiShowHist
newTC(tBox, 2,5,str.format(" {0,number,#.##} ", rsi4_1),width_c0,vWhite,rsi4_1 < 50 ? bearishColor:bullishColor,'left',rsiTextSize)
newTC(tBox, 3,5,str.format(" {0,number,#.##} ", rsi4_2),width_c0,vWhite,rsi4_2 < 50 ? bearishColor:bullishColor,'left',rsiTextSize)
//------------------------------------------------------
//--- Alerts -------------------------------------------
//------------------------------------------------------
Relative Strength Index Remastered [CHE]Relative Strength Index Remastered — Enhanced RSI with robust divergence detection using price-based pivots and line-of-sight validation to reduce false signals compared to the standard RSI indicator.
Summary
RSI Remastered builds on the classic Relative Strength Index by adding a more reliable divergence detection system that relies on price pivots rather than RSI pivots alone, incorporating a line-of-sight check to ensure the RSI path between points remains clear. This approach filters out many false divergences that occur in the original RSI indicator due to its volatile pivot detection on the RSI line itself. Users benefit from clearer reversal and continuation signals, especially in noisy markets, with optional hidden divergence support for trend confirmation. The core RSI calculation and smoothing options remain familiar, but the divergence logic provides materially fewer alerts while maintaining sensitivity.
Motivation: Why this design?
The standard RSI indicator often generates misleading divergence signals because it detects pivots directly on the RSI values, which can fluctuate erratically in volatile conditions, leading to frequent false positives that confuse traders during ranging or choppy price action. RSI Remastered addresses this by shifting pivot detection to the underlying price highs and lows, which are more stable, and adding a validation step that confirms the RSI line does not cross the direct path between pivot points. This design targets the real problem of over-signaling in the original, promoting more actionable insights without altering the RSI's core momentum measurement.
What’s different vs. standard approaches?
- Reference baseline: The classical TradingView RSI indicator, which uses simple RSI-based pivot detection for divergences.
- Architecture differences:
- Pivot identification on price extremes (highs and lows) instead of RSI values, extracting RSI levels at those points for comparison.
- Addition of a line-of-sight validation that checks the RSI path bar by bar between pivots to prevent signals where the line is interrupted.
- Inclusion of hidden divergence types alongside regular ones, using the same robust framework.
- Configurable drawing of connecting lines between validated pivot RSI points for visual clarity.
- Practical effect: Charts show fewer but higher-quality divergence markers and lines, reducing clutter from the original's frequent RSI pivot triggers; this matters for avoiding whipsaws in intraday trading, where the standard version might flag dozens of invalid setups per session.
Key Comparison Aspects
Aspect: Title/Shorttitle
Original RSI: "Relative Strength Index" / "RSI"
Robust Variant: "Relative Strength Index Remastered " / "RSI RM"
Aspect: Max. Lines/Labels
Original RSI: No specification (Standard: 50/50)
Robust Variant: max_lines_count=200, max_labels_count=200 (for more lines/markers in divergences)
Aspect: RSI Calculation & Plots
Original RSI: Identical: RSI with RMA, Plots (line, bands, gradient fills)
Robust Variant: Identical: RSI with RMA, Plots (line, bands, gradient fills)
Aspect: Smoothing (MA)
Original RSI: Identical: Inputs for MA types (SMA, EMA etc.), Bollinger Bands optional
Robust Variant: Identical: Inputs for MA types (SMA, EMA etc.), Bollinger Bands optional
Aspect: Divergence Activation
Original RSI: input.bool(false, "Calculate Divergence") (disabled by default)
Robust Variant: input.bool(true, "Calculate Divergence") (enabled by default, with tooltip)
Aspect: Pivot Calculation
Original RSI: Pivots on RSI (ta.pivotlow/high on RSI values)
Robust Variant: Pivots on price (ta.pivotlow/high on low/high), RSI values then extracted
Aspect: Lookback Values
Original RSI: Fixed: lookbackLeft=5, lookbackRight=5
Robust Variant: Input: L=5 (Pivot Left), R=5 (Pivot Right), adjustable (min=1, max=50)
Aspect: Range Between Pivots
Original RSI: Fixed: rangeUpper=60, rangeLower=5 (via _inRange function)
Robust Variant: Input: rangeUpper=60 (Max Bars), rangeLower=5 (Min Bars), adjustable (min=1–6, max=100–300)
Aspect: Divergence Types
Original RSI: Only Regular Bullish/Bearish: - Bull: Price LL + RSI HL - Bear: Price HH + RSI LH
Robust Variant: Regular + Hidden (optional via showHidden=true): - Regular Bull: Price LL + RSI HL - Regular Bear: Price HH + RSI LH - Hidden Bull: Price HL + RSI LL - Hidden Bear: Price LH + RSI HH
Aspect: Validation
Original RSI: No additional check (only pivot + range check)
Robust Variant: Line-of-Sight Check: RSI line must not cross the connecting line between pivots (line_clear function with slope calculation and loop for each bar in between)
Aspect: Signals (Plots/Shapes)
Original RSI: - Plot of pivot points (if divergence) - Shapes: "Bull"/"Bear" at RSI value, offset=-5
Robust Variant: - No pivot plots, instead shapes at RSI , offset=-R (adjustable) - Shapes: "Bull"/"Bear" (Regular), "HBull"/"HBear" (Hidden) - Colors: Lime/Red (Regular), Teal/Orange (Hidden)
Aspect: Line Drawing
Original RSI: No lines
Robust Variant: Optional (showLines=true): Lines between RSI pivots (thick for regular, dashed/thin for hidden), extend=none
Aspect: Alerts
Original RSI: Only Regular Bullish/Bearish (with pivot lookback reference)
Robust Variant: Regular Bullish/Bearish + Hidden Bullish/Bearish (specific "at latest pivot low/high")
Aspect: Robustness
Original RSI: Simple, prone to false signals (RSI pivots can be volatile)
Robust Variant: Higher: Price pivots are more stable, line-of-sight filters "broken" divergences, hidden support for trend continuations
Aspect: Code Length/Structure
Original RSI: ~100 lines, simple if-blocks for bull/bear
Robust Variant: ~150 lines, extended helper functions (e.g., inRange, line_clear), var group for inputs
How it works (technical)
The indicator first computes the core RSI value based on recent price changes, separating upward and downward movements over the specified length and smoothing them to derive a momentum reading scaled between zero and one hundred. This value is then plotted in a separate pane with fixed upper and lower reference lines at seventy and thirty, along with optional gradient fills to highlight overbought and oversold zones.
For smoothing, a moving average type is applied to the RSI if enabled, with an option to add bands around it based on the variability of recent RSI values scaled by a multiplier. Divergence detection activates on confirmed price pivots: lows for bullish checks and highs for bearish. At each new pivot, the system retrieves the bar index and values (price and RSI) for the current and prior pivot, ensuring they fall within a configurable bar range to avoid unrelated points.
Comparisons then assess whether the price has made a lower low (or higher high) while the RSI at those points moves in the opposite direction—higher for bullish regular, lower for bearish regular. For hidden types, the directions reverse to capture trend strength. The line-of-sight check calculates the straight path between the two RSI points and verifies that the actual RSI values in between stay entirely above (for bullish) or below (for bearish) that path, breaking the signal if any bar violates it. Valid signals trigger shapes at the RSI level of the new pivot and optional lines connecting the points. Initialization uses built-in functions to track prior occurrences, with states persisting across bars for accurate historical comparisons. No higher timeframe data is used, so confirmation occurs after the right pivot bars close, minimizing live-bar repaints.
Parameter Guide
Length — Controls the period for measuring price momentum changes — Default: 14 — Trade-offs/Tips: Shorter values increase responsiveness but add noise and more false signals; longer smooths trends but delays entries in fast markets.
Source — Selects the price input for RSI calculation — Default: Close — Trade-offs/Tips: Use high or low for volatility focus, but close works best for most assets; mismatches can skew overbought/oversold reads.
Calculate Divergence — Enables the enhanced divergence logic — Default: True — Trade-offs/Tips: Disable for pure RSI view to save computation; essential for signal reliability over the standard method.
Type (Smoothing) — Chooses the moving average applied to RSI — Default: SMA — Trade-offs/Tips: None for raw RSI; EMA for quicker adaptation, but SMA reduces whipsaws; Bollinger Bands option adds volatility context at cost of added lines.
Length (Smoothing) — Period for the smoothing average — Default: 14 — Trade-offs/Tips: Match RSI length for consistency; shorter boosts signal speed but amplifies noise in the smoothed line.
BB StdDev — Multiplier for band width around smoothed RSI — Default: 2.0 — Trade-offs/Tips: Lower narrows bands for tighter signals, risking more touches; higher widens for fewer but stronger breakouts.
Pivot Left — Bars to the left for confirming price pivots — Default: 5 — Trade-offs/Tips: Increase for stricter pivots in noisy data, reducing signals; too high delays confirmation excessively.
Pivot Right — Bars to the right for confirming price pivots — Default: 5 — Trade-offs/Tips: Balances with left for symmetry; longer right ensures maturity but shifts signals backward.
Max Bars Between Pivots — Upper limit on distance for valid pivot pairs — Default: 60 — Trade-offs/Tips: Tighten for short-term trades to focus recent action; widen for swing setups but risks unrelated comparisons.
Min Bars Between Pivots — Lower limit to avoid clustered pivots — Default: 5 — Trade-offs/Tips: Raise to filter micro-moves; too low invites overlapping signals like the original RSI.
Detect Hidden — Includes trend-continuation hidden types — Default: True — Trade-offs/Tips: Enable for full trend analysis; disable simplifies to reversals only, akin to basic RSI.
Draw Lines — Shows connecting lines between valid pivots — Default: True — Trade-offs/Tips: Turn off for cleaner charts; helps visually confirm line-of-sight in backtests.
Reading & Interpretation
The main RSI line oscillates between zero and one hundred, crossing above fifty suggesting building momentum and below indicating weakness; touches near seventy or thirty flag potential extremes. The optional smoothed line and bands provide a filtered view—price above the upper band on the RSI pane hints at overextension. Divergence shapes appear as upward labels for bullish (lime for regular, teal for hidden) and downward for bearish (red regular, orange hidden) at the pivot's RSI level, signaling a mismatch only after validation. Connecting lines, if drawn, slope between points without RSI interference, their color matching the shape type; a dashed style denotes hidden. Fewer shapes overall compared to the standard RSI mean higher conviction, but always confirm with price structure.
Practical Workflows & Combinations
- Trend following: Enter longs on regular bullish shapes near support with higher highs in price; filter hidden bullish for pullback buys in uptrends, pairing with a rising smoothed RSI above fifty.
- Exits/Stops: Use bearish regular as reversal warnings to tighten stops; hidden bearish in downtrends confirms continuation—exit if lines show RSI crossing the path.
- Multi-asset/Multi-TF: Defaults suit forex and stocks on one-hour charts; for crypto volatility, widen pivot ranges to ten; scale min/max bars proportionally on daily for swings, avoiding the original's intraday spam.
Behavior, Constraints & Performance
Signals confirm only after the right pivot bars close, so live bars may show tentative pivots that vanish on close, unlike the standard RSI's immediate RSI-pivot triggers—plan for this delay in automation. No higher timeframe calls, so no security-related repaints. Resources include up to two hundred lines and labels for dense charts, with a loop in validation scanning up to three hundred bars between pivots, which is efficient but could slow on very long histories. Known limits: Slight lag at pivot confirmation in trending markets; volatile RSI might rarely miss fine path violations; not ideal for gap-heavy assets where pivots skip.
Sensible Defaults & Quick Tuning
Start with defaults for balanced momentum and divergence on most timeframes. For too many signals (like the original), raise pivot left/right to eight and min bars to ten to filter noise. If sluggish in trends, shorten RSI length to nine and enable EMA smoothing for faster adaptation. In high-volatility assets, widen max bars to one hundred but disable hidden to focus essentials. For clean reversal hunts, set smoothing to none and lines on.
What this indicator is—and isn’t
RSI Remastered serves as a refined momentum and divergence visualization tool, enhancing the standard RSI for better signal quality in technical analysis setups. It is not a standalone trading system, nor does it predict price moves—pair it with volume, structure breaks, and risk rules for decisions. Use alongside position sizing and broader context, not in isolation.
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.
Do not use this indicator on Heikin-Ashi, Renko, Kagi, Point-and-Figure, or Range charts, as these chart types can produce unrealistic results for signal markers and alerts.
Best regards and happy trading
Chervolino
MTF Multi EMA - IntradayMTF Multi EMA – Intraday
Purpose:
To quickly analyze trend direction and alignment across multiple timeframes (1m, 3m, 5m, 15m, 30m, and 60m) using fast and slow EMAs for each timeframe — and combine them into a simple “stack score” for easy visual decision-making. The script is tuned for Intraday Trading indicator by default.
Concept
Each timeframe (TF) — like 1m, 3m, 5m, etc. — has two EMAs:
A fast EMA (shorter length)
A slow EMA (longer length)
When the fast EMA > slow EMA, that timeframe is bullish.
When the fast EMA < slow EMA, that timeframe is bearish.
By combining multiple timeframes together, the indicator helps you:
Identify when all trends align bullishly (strong buy bias)
Identify when all trends align bearishly (strong sell bias)
Stay out during mixed or sideways phases
Inputs Explained
Setting Description
1m / 3m / 5m / 15m / 30m / 60m EMA Lengths Controls the EMA period for each timeframe’s fast and slow EMAs.
Fast EMA Color Color for all fast EMAs plotted on chart.
Slow EMA Color Color for all slow EMAs plotted on chart.
Use Smooth Interpolation Ensures smoother plots when merging higher TF data into a smaller chart (recommended ON).
Show Toggle visibility of each timeframe’s EMAs.
Table Position Lets you move the mini dashboard to any chart corner.
Stack Score
The Stack Score measures how many timeframes are bullish vs bearish:
Stack Score Meaning
+6 All timeframes bullish → Strong Uptrend
+3 to +5 Majority bullish → Bullish Bias
0 Neutral / Mixed → Sideways Market
−3 to −5 Majority bearish → Bearish Bias
−6 All timeframes bearish → Strong Downtrend
Table Display
At the chosen chart corner, you’ll see:
TF Direction
1m 🟢 B (Bullish) / 🔴 S (Bearish)
3m 🟢 B (Bullish) / 🔴 S (Bearish)
5m 🟢 B (Bullish) / 🔴 S (Bearish)
15m 🟢 B (Bullish) / 🔴 S (Bearish)
30m 🟢 B (Bullish) / 🔴 S (Bearish)
60m 🟢 B (Bullish) / 🔴 S (Bearish)
Score Final alignment score (color-coded)
Color meanings:
🟢 Green cell = bullish for that TF
🔴 Red cell = bearish for that TF
The Score cell background color changes with strength:
Bright green → strong bull
Yellow → neutral
Red / Maroon → strong bear
How to Use for Trading (Intraday NIFTY 5m)
Recommended Chart: 5-minute timeframe on NIFTY Futures or major index stocks.
🔹 1. Identify Trend Alignment
When Score ≥ +3 → Market bias is bullish.
→ Look for long entries (buy breakouts or EMA retests).
When Score ≤ −3 → Market bias is bearish.
→ Look for short entries (sell breakdowns or retests).
When Score is between −2 and +2 → Trend is mixed.
→ Best to wait — avoid trading in choppy conditions.
🔹 2. Combine with Price Action
Use it with:
Trendline breaks or retests
Candle confirmation (e.g. bullish engulfing or rejection)
Volume surge
Example:
On NIFTY 5m — if score = +5, price breaks above a descending trendline, and 1m–15m EMAs are all rising → strong long signal.
🔹 3. Avoid Conflicts
If lower timeframes (1m/3m/5m) are bullish but higher ones (30m/60m) are bearish,
→ Trend is short-term bullish but larger bias is down — scalps only, not swings.
Optional Alerts
If you add alert conditions (as suggested earlier):
“Strong Bullish Alignment” triggers when score ≥ +5
“Strong Bearish Alignment” triggers when score ≤ −5
This gives you early alerts when full trend alignment occurs — ideal for breakout setups.
Some more Tips
Use 5m or 15m chart as your main view.
Use Stack Score as a trend filter — trade with it, not against it.
Combine with Breakout + Retest strategy or Trendline color-coded system you’re building.
In sideways days (score near 0), reduce risk or skip trades.
MACD HTF Hardcoded (A/B Presets) + Regimes [CHE] MACD HTF Hardcoded (A/B Presets) + Regimes — Higher-timeframe MACD emulation with acceptance-based regime filter and on-chart diagnostics
Summary
This indicator emulates a higher-timeframe MACD directly on the current chart using two hardcoded preset families and a time-bucket mapping, avoiding cross-timeframe requests. It classifies four MACD regimes and applies an acceptance filter that requires several consecutive bars before a state is considered valid. A small dead-band around zero reduces noise near the axis. An on-chart table reports the active preset, the inferred time bucket, the resolved lengths, and the current regime.
Pine version: v6
Overlay: false
Primary outputs: MACD line, Signal line, Histogram columns, zero line, regime-change alert, info table
Motivation: Why this design?
Cross-timeframe indicators often rely on external timeframe requests, which can introduce repaint paths and added latency. This design provides a deterministic alternative: it maps the current chart’s timeframe to coarse higher-timeframe buckets and uses fixed EMA lengths that approximate those views. The dead-band suppresses flip-flops around zero, and the acceptance counter reduces whipsaw by requiring sustained agreement across bars before acknowledging a regime.
What’s different vs. standard approaches?
Baseline: Classical MACD with user-selected lengths on the same timeframe, or higher-timeframe MACD via cross-timeframe requests.
Architecture differences:
Hardcoded A and B length families with a bucket map derived from the chart timeframe.
No `request.security`; all calculations occur on the current series.
Regime classification from MACD and Histogram sign, gated by an acceptance count and a small zero dead-band.
Diagnostics table for transparency.
Practical effect: The MACD behaves like a slower, higher-timeframe variant without external requests. Regimes switch less often due to the dead-band and acceptance logic, which can improve stability in choppy sessions.
How it works (technical)
The script derives a coarse bucket from the chart timeframe using `timeframe.in_seconds` and maps it to preset-specific EMA lengths. EMAs of the source build MACD and Signal; their difference is the Histogram. Signs of MACD and Histogram define four regimes: strong bull, weak bull, strong bear, and weak bear. A small, user-defined band around zero treats values near the axis as neutral. An acceptance counter checks whether the same regime persisted for a given number of consecutive bars before it is emitted as the filtered regime. A single alert condition fires when the filtered regime changes. The histogram columns change shade based on position relative to zero and whether they are rising or falling. A persistent table object shows preset, bucket tag, resolved lengths, and the filtered regime. No cross-timeframe requests are used, so repaint risk is limited to normal live-bar movement; values stabilize on close.
Parameter Guide
Source — Input series for MACD — Default: Close — Using a smoother source increases stability but adds lag.
Preset — A or B length family — Default: “3,10,16” — Switch to “12,26,9” for the classic family mapped to buckets.
Table Position — Anchor for the info table — Default: Top right — Choose a corner that avoids covering price action.
Table Size — Table text size — Default: Normal — Use small on dense charts, large for presentations.
Dark Mode — Table theme — Default: Enabled — Match your chart background for readability.
Show Table — Toggle diagnostics table — Default: Enabled — Disable for a cleaner pane.
Zero dead-band (epsilon) — Noise gate around zero — Default: Zero — Increase slightly when you see frequent flips near zero.
Acceptance bars (n) — Bars required to confirm a regime — Default: Three — Raise to reduce whipsaw; lower to react faster.
Reading & Interpretation
Histogram columns: Above zero indicates bullish pressure; below zero indicates bearish pressure. Darker shade implies the histogram increased compared with the prior bar; lighter shade implies it decreased.
MACD vs. Signal lines: The spread corresponds to histogram height.
Regimes:
Strong bull: MACD above zero and Histogram above zero.
Weak bull: MACD above zero and Histogram below zero.
Strong bear: MACD below zero and Histogram below zero.
Weak bear: MACD below zero and Histogram above zero.
Table: Inspect active preset, bucket tag, resolved lengths, and the filtered regime number with its description.
Practical Workflows & Combinations
Trend following: Use strong bull to favor long exposure and strong bear to favor short exposure. Use weak states as pullback or transition context. Combine with structure tools such as swing highs and lows or a baseline moving average for confirmation.
Exits and risk: In strong trends, consider exiting partial size on a regime downgrade to a weak state. In choppy sessions, increase the acceptance bars to reduce churn.
Multi-asset / Multi-timeframe: Works on time-based charts across liquid futures, indices, currencies, and large-cap equities. Bucket mapping helps retain a consistent feel when moving from lower to higher timeframes.
Behavior, Constraints & Performance
Repaint/confirmation: No cross-timeframe requests; values can evolve intrabar and settle on close. Alerts follow your TradingView alert timing settings.
Resources: `max_bars_back` is set to five thousand. Very large resolved lengths require sufficient history to seed EMAs; expect a warm-up period on first load or after switching symbols.
Known limits: Dead-band and acceptance can delay recognition at sharp turns. Extremely thin markets or large gaps may still cause brief regime reversals.
Sensible Defaults & Quick Tuning
Start with preset “3,10,16”, dead-band near zero, and acceptance of three bars.
Too many flips near zero: increase the dead-band slightly or raise the acceptance bars.
Too sluggish in clean trends: reduce the acceptance bars by one.
Too sensitive on fast lower timeframes: switch to the “12,26,9” preset family or raise the acceptance bars.
Want less clutter: hide the table and keep the alert.
What this indicator is—and isn’t
This is a visualization and regime layer for MACD using higher-timeframe emulation and stability gates. It is not a complete trading system and does not generate position sizing or risk management. Use it with market structure, execution rules, and protective stops.
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.
Do not use this indicator on Heikin-Ashi, Renko, Kagi, Point-and-Figure, or Range charts, as these chart types can produce unrealistic results for signal markers and alerts.
Best regards and happy trading
Chervolino
Market Zone Analyzer[BullByte]Understanding the Market Zone Analyzer
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1. Purpose of the Indicator
The Market Zone Analyzer is a Pine Script™ (version 6) indicator designed to streamline market analysis on TradingView. Rather than scanning multiple separate tools, it unifies four core dimensions—trend strength, momentum, price action, and market activity—into a single, consolidated view. By doing so, it helps traders:
• Save time by avoiding manual cross-referencing of disparate signals.
• Reduce decision-making errors that can arise from juggling multiple indicators.
• Gain a clear, reliable read on whether the market is in a bullish, bearish, or sideways phase, so they can more confidently decide to enter, exit, or hold a position.
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2. Why a Trader Should Use It
• Unified View: Combines all essential market dimensions into one easy-to-read score and dashboard, eliminating the need to piece together signals manually.
• Adaptability: Automatically adjusts its internal weighting for trend, momentum, and price action based on current volatility. Whether markets are choppy or calm, the indicator remains relevant.
• Ease of Interpretation: Outputs a simple “BULLISH,” “BEARISH,” or “SIDEWAYS” label, supplemented by an intuitive on-chart dashboard and an oscillator plot that visually highlights market direction.
• Reliability Features: Built-in smoothing of the net score and hysteresis logic (requiring consecutive confirmations before flips) minimize false signals during noisy or range-bound phases.
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3. Why These Specific Indicators?
This script relies on a curated set of well-established technical tools, each chosen for its particular strength in measuring one of the four core dimensions:
1. Trend Strength:
• ADX/DMI (Average Directional Index / Directional Movement Index): Measures how strong a trend is, and whether the +DI line is above the –DI line (bullish) or vice versa (bearish).
• Moving Average Slope (Fast MA vs. Slow MA): Compares a shorter-period SMA to a longer-period SMA; if the fast MA sits above the slow MA, it confirms an uptrend, and vice versa for a downtrend.
• Ichimoku Cloud Differential (Senkou A vs. Senkou B): Provides a forward-looking view of trend direction; Senkou A above Senkou B signals bullishness, and the opposite signals bearishness.
2. Momentum:
• Relative Strength Index (RSI): Identifies overbought (above its dynamically calculated upper bound) or oversold (below its lower bound) conditions; changes in RSI often precede price reversals.
• Stochastic %K: Highlights shifts in short-term momentum by comparing closing price to the recent high/low range; values above its upper band signal bullish momentum, below its lower band signal bearish momentum.
• MACD Histogram: Measures the difference between the MACD line and its signal line; a positive histogram indicates upward momentum, a negative histogram indicates downward momentum.
3. Price Action:
• Highest High / Lowest Low (HH/LL) Range: Over a defined lookback period, this captures breakout or breakdown levels. A closing price near the recent highs (with a positive MA slope) yields a bullish score, and near the lows (with a negative MA slope) yields a bearish score.
• Heikin-Ashi Doji Detection: Uses Heikin-Ashi candles to identify indecision or continuation patterns. A small Heikin-Ashi body (doji) relative to recent volatility is scored as neutral; a larger body in the direction of the MA slope is scored bullish or bearish.
• Candle Range Measurement: Compares each candle’s high-low range against its own dynamic band (average range ± standard deviation). Large candles aligning with the prevailing trend score bullish or bearish accordingly; unusually small candles can indicate exhaustion or consolidation.
4. Market Activity:
• Bollinger Bands Width (BBW): Measures the distance between BB upper and lower bands; wide bands indicate high volatility, narrow bands indicate low volatility.
• Average True Range (ATR): Quantifies average price movement (volatility). A sudden spike in ATR suggests a volatile environment, while a contraction suggests calm.
• Keltner Channels Width (KCW): Similar to BBW but uses ATR around an EMA. Provides a second layer of volatility context, confirming or contrasting BBW readings.
• Volume (with Moving Average): Compares current volume to its moving average ± standard deviation. High volume validates strong moves; low volume signals potential lack of conviction.
By combining these tools, the indicator captures trend direction, momentum strength, price-action nuances, and overall market energy, yielding a more balanced and comprehensive assessment than any single tool alone.
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4. What Makes This Indicator Stand Out
• Multi-Dimensional Analysis: Rather than relying on a lone oscillator or moving average crossover, it simultaneously evaluates trend, momentum, price action, and activity.
• Dynamic Weighting: The relative importance of trend, momentum, and price action adjusts automatically based on real-time volatility (Market Activity State). For example, in highly volatile conditions, trend and momentum signals carry more weight; in calm markets, price action signals are prioritized.
• Stability Mechanisms:
• Smoothing: The net score is passed through a short moving average, filtering out noise, especially on lower timeframes.
• Hysteresis: Both Market Activity State and the final bullish/bearish/sideways zone require two consecutive confirmations before flipping, reducing whipsaw.
• Visual Interpretation: A fully customizable on-chart dashboard displays each sub-indicator’s value, regime, score, and comment, all color-coded. The oscillator plot changes color to reflect the current market zone (green for bullish, red for bearish, gray for sideways) and shows horizontal threshold lines at +2, 0, and –2.
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5. Recommended Timeframes
• Short-Term (5 min, 15 min): Day traders and scalpers can benefit from rapid signals, but should enable smoothing (and possibly disable hysteresis) to reduce false whipsaws.
• Medium-Term (1 h, 4 h): Swing traders find a balance between responsiveness and reliability. Less smoothing is required here, and the default parameters (e.g., ADX length = 14, RSI length = 14) perform well.
• Long-Term (Daily, Weekly): Position traders tracking major trends can disable smoothing for immediate raw readings, since higher-timeframe noise is minimal. Adjust lookback lengths (e.g., increase adxLength, rsiLength) if desired for slower signals.
Tip: If you keep smoothing off, stick to timeframes of 1 h or higher to avoid excessive signal “chatter.”
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6. How Scoring Works
A. Individual Indicator Scores
Each sub-indicator is assigned one of three discrete scores:
• +1 if it indicates a bullish condition (e.g., RSI above its dynamically calculated upper bound).
• 0 if it is neutral (e.g., RSI between upper and lower bounds).
• –1 if it indicates a bearish condition (e.g., RSI below its dynamically calculated lower bound).
Examples of individual score assignments:
• ADX/DMI:
• +1 if ADX ≥ adxThreshold and +DI > –DI (strong bullish trend)
• –1 if ADX ≥ adxThreshold and –DI > +DI (strong bearish trend)
• 0 if ADX < adxThreshold (trend strength below threshold)
• RSI:
• +1 if RSI > RSI_upperBound
• –1 if RSI < RSI_lowerBound
• 0 otherwise
• ATR (as part of Market Activity):
• +1 if ATR > (ATR_MA + stdev(ATR))
• –1 if ATR < (ATR_MA – stdev(ATR))
• 0 otherwise
Each of the four main categories shares this same +1/0/–1 logic across their sub-components.
B. Category Scores
Once each sub-indicator reports +1, 0, or –1, these are summed within their categories as follows:
• Trend Score = (ADX score) + (MA slope score) + (Ichimoku differential score)
• Momentum Score = (RSI score) + (Stochastic %K score) + (MACD histogram score)
• Price Action Score = (Highest-High/Lowest-Low score) + (Heikin-Ashi doji score) + (Candle range score)
• Market Activity Raw Score = (BBW score) + (ATR score) + (KC width score) + (Volume score)
Each category’s summed value can range between –3 and +3 (for Trend, Momentum, and Price Action), and between –4 and +4 for Market Activity raw.
C. Market Activity State and Dynamic Weight Adjustments
Rather than contributing directly to the netScore like the other three categories, Market Activity determines how much weight to assign to Trend, Momentum, and Price Action:
1. Compute Market Activity Raw Score by summing BBW, ATR, KCW, and Volume individual scores (each +1/0/–1).
2. Bucket into High, Medium, or Low Activity:
• High if raw Score ≥ 2 (volatile market).
• Low if raw Score ≤ –2 (calm market).
• Medium otherwise.
3. Apply Hysteresis (if enabled): The state only flips after two consecutive bars register the same high/low/medium label.
4. Set Category Weights:
• High Activity: Trend = 50 %, Momentum = 35 %, Price Action = 15 %.
• Low Activity: Trend = 25 %, Momentum = 20 %, Price Action = 55 %.
• Medium Activity: Use the trader’s base weight inputs (e.g., Trend = 40 %, Momentum = 30 %, Price Action = 30 % by default).
D. Calculating the Net Score
5. Normalize Base Weights (so that the sum of Trend + Momentum + Price Action always equals 100 %).
6. Determine Current Weights based on the Market Activity State (High/Medium/Low).
7. Compute Each Category’s Contribution: Multiply (categoryScore) × (currentWeight).
8. Sum Contributions to get the raw netScore (a floating-point value that can exceed ±3 when scores are strong).
9. Smooth the netScore over two bars (if smoothing is enabled) to reduce noise.
10. Apply Hysteresis to the Final Zone:
• If the smoothed netScore ≥ +2, the bar is classified as “Bullish.”
• If the smoothed netScore ≤ –2, the bar is classified as “Bearish.”
• Otherwise, it is “Sideways.”
• To prevent rapid flips, the script requires two consecutive bars in the new zone before officially changing the displayed zone (if hysteresis is on).
E. Thresholds for Zone Classification
• BULLISH: netScore ≥ +2
• BEARISH: netScore ≤ –2
• SIDEWAYS: –2 < netScore < +2
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7. Role of Volatility (Market Activity State) in Scoring
Volatility acts as a dynamic switch that shifts which category carries the most influence:
1. High Activity (Volatile):
• Detected when at least two sub-scores out of BBW, ATR, KCW, and Volume equal +1.
• The script sets Trend weight = 50 % and Momentum weight = 35 %. Price Action weight is minimized at 15 %.
• Rationale: In volatile markets, strong trending moves and momentum surges dominate, so those signals are more reliable than nuanced candle patterns.
2. Low Activity (Calm):
• Detected when at least two sub-scores out of BBW, ATR, KCW, and Volume equal –1.
• The script sets Price Action weight = 55 %, Trend = 25 %, and Momentum = 20 %.
• Rationale: In quiet, sideways markets, subtle price-action signals (breakouts, doji patterns, small-range candles) are often the best early indicators of a new move.
3. Medium Activity (Balanced):
• Raw Score between –1 and +1 from the four volatility metrics.
• Uses whatever base weights the trader has specified (e.g., Trend = 40 %, Momentum = 30 %, Price Action = 30 %).
Because volatility can fluctuate rapidly, the script employs hysteresis on Market Activity State: a new High or Low state must occur on two consecutive bars before weights actually shift. This avoids constant back-and-forth weight changes and provides more stability.
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8. Scoring Example (Hypothetical Scenario)
• Symbol: Bitcoin on a 1-hour chart.
• Market Activity: Raw volatility sub-scores show BBW (+1), ATR (+1), KCW (0), Volume (+1) → Total raw Score = +3 → High Activity.
• Weights Selected: Trend = 50 %, Momentum = 35 %, Price Action = 15 %.
• Trend Signals:
• ADX strong and +DI > –DI → +1
• Fast MA above Slow MA → +1
• Ichimoku Senkou A > Senkou B → +1
→ Trend Score = +3
• Momentum Signals:
• RSI above upper bound → +1
• MACD histogram positive → +1
• Stochastic %K within neutral zone → 0
→ Momentum Score = +2
• Price Action Signals:
• Highest High/Lowest Low check yields 0 (close not near extremes)
• Heikin-Ashi doji reading is neutral → 0
• Candle range slightly above upper bound but trend is strong, so → +1
→ Price Action Score = +1
• Compute Net Score (before smoothing):
• Trend contribution = 3 × 0.50 = 1.50
• Momentum contribution = 2 × 0.35 = 0.70
• Price Action contribution = 1 × 0.15 = 0.15
• Raw netScore = 1.50 + 0.70 + 0.15 = 2.35
• Since 2.35 ≥ +2 and hysteresis is met, the final zone is “Bullish.”
Although the netScore lands at 2.35 (Bullish), smoothing might bring it slightly below 2.00 on the first bar (e.g., 1.90), in which case the script would wait for a second consecutive reading above +2 before officially classifying the zone as Bullish (if hysteresis is enabled).
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9. Correlation Between Categories
The four categories—Trend Strength, Momentum, Price Action, and Market Activity—often reinforce or offset one another. The script takes advantage of these natural correlations:
• Bullish Alignment: If ADX is strong and pointed upward, fast MA is above slow MA, and Ichimoku is positive, that usually coincides with RSI climbing above its upper bound and the MACD histogram turning positive. In such cases, both Trend and Momentum categories generate +1 or +2. Because the Market Activity State is likely High (given the accompanying volatility), Trend and Momentum weights are at their peak, so the netScore quickly crosses into Bullish territory.
• Sideways/Consolidation: During a low-volatility, sideways phase, ADX may fall below its threshold, MAs may flatten, and RSI might hover in the neutral band. However, subtle price-action signals (like a small breakout candle or a Heikin-Ashi candle with a slight bias) can still produce a +1 in the Price Action category. If Market Activity is Low, Price Action’s weight (55 %) can carry enough influence—even if Trend and Momentum are neutral—to push the netScore out of “Sideways” into a mild bullish or bearish bias.
• Opposing Signals: When Trend is bullish but Momentum turns negative (for example, price continues up but RSI rolls over), the two scores can partially cancel. Market Activity may remain Medium, in which case the netScore lingers near zero (Sideways). The trader can then wait for either a clearer momentum shift or a fresh price-action breakout before committing.
By dynamically recognizing these correlations and adjusting weights, the indicator ensures that:
• When Trend and Momentum align (and volatility supports it), the netScore leaps strongly into Bullish or Bearish.
• When Trend is neutral but Price Action shows an early move in a low-volatility environment, Price Action’s extra weight in the Low Activity State can still produce actionable signals.
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10. Market Activity State & Its Role (Detailed)
The Market Activity State is not a direct category score—it is an overarching context setter for how heavily to trust Trend, Momentum, or Price Action. Here’s how it is derived and applied:
1. Calculate Four Volatility Sub-Scores:
• BBW: Compare the current band width to its own moving average ± standard deviation. If BBW > (BBW_MA + stdev), assign +1 (high volatility); if BBW < (BBW_MA × 0.5), assign –1 (low volatility); else 0.
• ATR: Compare ATR to its moving average ± standard deviation. A spike above the upper threshold is +1; a contraction below the lower threshold is –1; otherwise 0.
• KCW: Same logic as ATR but around the KCW mean.
• Volume: Compare current volume to its volume MA ± standard deviation. Above the upper threshold is +1; below the lower threshold is –1; else 0.
2. Sum Sub-Scores → Raw Market Activity Score: Range between –4 and +4.
3. Assign Market Activity State:
• High Activity: Raw Score ≥ +2 (at least two volatility metrics are strongly spiking).
• Low Activity: Raw Score ≤ –2 (at least two metrics signal unusually low volatility or thin volume).
• Medium Activity: Raw Score is between –1 and +1 inclusive.
4. Hysteresis for Stability:
• If hysteresis is enabled, a new state only takes hold after two consecutive bars confirm the same High, Medium, or Low label.
• This prevents the Market Activity State from bouncing around when volatility is on the fence.
5. Set Category Weights Based on Activity State:
• High Activity: Trend = 50 %, Momentum = 35 %, Price Action = 15 %.
• Low Activity: Trend = 25 %, Momentum = 20 %, Price Action = 55 %.
• Medium Activity: Use trader’s base weights (e.g., Trend = 40 %, Momentum = 30 %, Price Action = 30 %).
6. Impact on netScore: Because category scores (–3 to +3) multiply by these weights, High Activity amplifies the effect of strong Trend and Momentum scores; Low Activity amplifies the effect of Price Action.
7. Market Context Tooltip: The dashboard includes a tooltip summarizing the current state—e.g., “High activity, trend and momentum prioritized,” “Low activity, price action prioritized,” or “Balanced market, all categories considered.”
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11. Category Weights: Base vs. Dynamic
Traders begin by specifying base weights for Trend Strength, Momentum, and Price Action that sum to 100 %. These apply only when volatility is in the Medium band. Once volatility shifts:
• High Volatility Overrides:
• Trend jumps from its base (e.g., 40 %) to 50 %.
• Momentum jumps from its base (e.g., 30 %) to 35 %.
• Price Action is reduced to 15 %.
Example: If base weights were Trend = 40 %, Momentum = 30 %, Price Action = 30 %, then in High Activity they become 50/35/15. A Trend score of +3 now contributes 3 × 0.50 = +1.50 to netScore; a Momentum +2 contributes 2 × 0.35 = +0.70. In total, Trend + Momentum can easily push netScore above the +2 threshold on its own.
• Low Volatility Overrides:
• Price Action leaps from its base (30 %) to 55 %.
• Trend falls to 25 %, Momentum falls to 20 %.
Why? When markets are quiet, subtle candle breakouts, doji patterns, and small-range expansions tend to foreshadow the next swing more effectively than raw trend readings. A Price Action score of +3 in this state contributes 3 × 0.55 = +1.65, which can carry the netScore toward +2—even if Trend and Momentum are neutral or only mildly positive.
Because these weight shifts happen only after two consecutive bars confirm a High or Low state (if hysteresis is on), the indicator avoids constantly flipping its emphasis during borderline volatility phases.
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12. Dominant Category Explained
Within the dashboard, a label such as “Trend Dominant,” “Momentum Dominant,” or “Price Action Dominant” appears when one category’s absolute weighted contribution to netScore is the largest. Concretely:
• Compute each category’s weighted contribution = (raw category score) × (current weight).
• Compare the absolute values of those three contributions.
• The category with the highest absolute value is flagged as Dominant for that bar.
Why It Matters:
• Momentum Dominant: Indicates that the combined force of RSI, Stochastic, and MACD (after weighting) is pushing netScore farther than either Trend or Price Action. In practice, it means that short-term sentiment and speed of change are the primary drivers right now, so traders should watch for continued momentum signals before committing to a trade.
• Trend Dominant: Means ADX, MA slope, and Ichimoku (once weighted) outweigh the other categories. This suggests a strong directional move is in place; trend-following entries or confirming pullbacks are likely to succeed.
• Price Action Dominant: Occurs when breakout/breakdown patterns, Heikin-Ashi candle readings, and range expansions (after weighting) are the most influential. This often happens in calmer markets, where subtle shifts in candle structure can foreshadow bigger moves.
By explicitly calling out which category is carrying the most weight at any moment, the dashboard gives traders immediate insight into why the netScore is tilting toward bullish, bearish, or sideways.
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13. Oscillator Plot: How to Read It
The “Net Score” oscillator sits below the dashboard and visually displays the smoothed netScore as a line graph. Key features:
1. Value Range: In normal conditions it oscillates roughly between –3 and +3, but extreme confluences can push it outside that range.
2. Horizontal Threshold Lines:
• +2 Line (Bullish threshold)
• 0 Line (Neutral midline)
• –2 Line (Bearish threshold)
3. Zone Coloring:
• Green Background (Bullish Zone): When netScore ≥ +2.
• Red Background (Bearish Zone): When netScore ≤ –2.
• Gray Background (Sideways Zone): When –2 < netScore < +2.
4. Dynamic Line Color:
• The plotted netScore line itself is colored green in a Bullish Zone, red in a Bearish Zone, or gray in a Sideways Zone, creating an immediate visual cue.
Interpretation Tips:
• Crossing Above +2: Signals a strong enough combined trend/momentum/price-action reading to classify as Bullish. Many traders wait for a clear crossing plus a confirmation candle before entering a long position.
• Crossing Below –2: Indicates a strong Bearish signal. Traders may consider short or exit strategies.
• Rising Slope, Even Below +2: If netScore climbs steadily from neutral toward +2, it demonstrates building bullish momentum.
• Divergence: If price makes a higher high but the oscillator fails to reach a new high, it can warn of weakening momentum and a potential reversal.
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14. Comments and Their Necessity
Every sub-indicator (ADX, MA slope, Ichimoku, RSI, Stochastic, MACD, HH/LL, Heikin-Ashi, Candle Range, BBW, ATR, KCW, Volume) generates a short comment that appears in the detailed dashboard. Examples:
• “Strong bullish trend” or “Strong bearish trend” for ADX/DMI
• “Fast MA above slow MA” or “Fast MA below slow MA” for MA slope
• “RSI above dynamic threshold” or “RSI below dynamic threshold” for RSI
• “MACD histogram positive” or “MACD histogram negative” for MACD Hist
• “Price near highs” or “Price near lows” for HH/LL checks
• “Bullish Heikin Ashi” or “Bearish Heikin Ashi” for HA Doji scoring
• “Large range, trend confirmed” or “Small range, trend contradicted” for Candle Range
Additionally, the top-row comment for each category is:
• Trend: “Highly Bullish,” “Highly Bearish,” or “Neutral Trend.”
• Momentum: “Strong Momentum,” “Weak Momentum,” or “Neutral Momentum.”
• Price Action: “Bullish Action,” “Bearish Action,” or “Neutral Action.”
• Market Activity: “Volatile Market,” “Calm Market,” or “Stable Market.”
Reasons for These Comments:
• Transparency: Shows exactly how each sub-indicator contributed to its category score.
• Education: Helps traders learn why a category is labeled bullish, bearish, or neutral, building intuition over time.
• Customization: If, for example, the RSI comment says “RSI neutral” despite an impending trend shift, a trader might choose to adjust RSI length or thresholds.
In the detailed dashboard, hovering over each comment cell also reveals a tooltip with additional context (e.g., “Fast MA above slow MA” or “Senkou A above Senkou B”), helping traders understand the precise rule behind that +1, 0, or –1 assignment.
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15. Real-Life Example (Consolidated)
• Instrument & Timeframe: Bitcoin (BTCUSD), 1-hour chart.
• Current Market Activity: BBW and ATR both spike (+1 each), KCW is moderately high (+1), but volume is only neutral (0) → Raw Market Activity Score = +2 → State = High Activity (after two bars, if hysteresis is on).
• Category Weights Applied: Trend = 50 %, Momentum = 35 %, Price Action = 15 %.
• Trend Sub-Scores:
1. ADX = 25 (above threshold 20) with +DI > –DI → +1.
2. Fast MA (20-period) sits above Slow MA (50-period) → +1.
3. Ichimoku: Senkou A > Senkou B → +1.
→ Trend Score = +3.
• Momentum Sub-Scores:
4. RSI = 75 (above its moving average +1 stdev) → +1.
5. MACD histogram = +0.15 → +1.
6. Stochastic %K = 50 (mid-range) → 0.
→ Momentum Score = +2.
• Price Action Sub-Scores:
7. Price is not within 1 % of the 20-period high/low and slope = positive → 0.
8. Heikin-Ashi body is slightly larger than stdev over last 5 bars with haClose > haOpen → +1.
9. Candle range is just above its dynamic upper bound but trend is already captured, so → +1.
→ Price Action Score = +2.
• Calculate netScore (before smoothing):
• Trend contribution = 3 × 0.50 = 1.50
• Momentum contribution = 2 × 0.35 = 0.70
• Price Action contribution = 2 × 0.15 = 0.30
• Raw netScore = 1.50 + 0.70 + 0.30 = 2.50 → Immediately classified as Bullish.
• Oscillator & Dashboard Output:
• The oscillator line crosses above +2 and turns green.
• Dashboard displays:
• Trend Regime “BULLISH,” Trend Score = 3, Comment = “Highly Bullish.”
• Momentum Regime “BULLISH,” Momentum Score = 2, Comment = “Strong Momentum.”
• Price Action Regime “BULLISH,” Price Action Score = 2, Comment = “Bullish Action.”
• Market Activity State “High,” Comment = “Volatile Market.”
• Weights: Trend 50 %, Momentum 35 %, Price Action 15 %.
• Dominant Category: Trend (because 1.50 > 0.70 > 0.30).
• Overall Score: 2.50, posCount = (three +1s in Trend) + (two +1s in Momentum) + (two +1s in Price Action) = 7 bullish signals, negCount = 0.
• Final Zone = “BULLISH.”
• The trader sees that both Trend and Momentum are reinforcing each other under high volatility. They might wait one more candle for confirmation but already have strong evidence to consider a long.
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• .
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Disclaimer
This indicator is strictly a technical analysis tool and does not constitute financial advice. All trading involves risk, including potential loss of capital. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Traders should:
• Always backtest the “Market Zone Analyzer ” on their chosen symbols and timeframes before committing real capital.
• Combine this tool with sound risk management, position sizing, and, if possible, fundamental analysis.
• Understand that no indicator is foolproof; always be prepared for unexpected market moves.
Goodluck
-BullByte!
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MTF_DrawingsLibrary 'MTF_Drawings'
This library helps with drawing indicators and candle charts on all timeframes.
FEATURES
CHART DRAWING : Library provides functions for drawing High Time Frame (HTF) and Low Time Frame (LTF) candles.
INDICATOR DRAWING : Library provides functions for drawing various types of HTF and LTF indicators.
CUSTOM COLOR DRAWING : Library allows to color candles and indicators based on specific conditions.
LINEFILLS : Library provides functions for drawing linefills.
CATEGORIES
The functions are named in a way that indicates they purpose:
{Ind} : Function is meant only for indicators.
{Hist} : Function is meant only for histograms.
{Candle} : Function is meant only for candles.
{Draw} : Function draws indicators, histograms and candle charts.
{Populate} : Function generates necessary arrays required by drawing functions.
{LTF} : Function is meant only for lower timeframes.
{HTF} : Function is meant only for higher timeframes.
{D} : Function draws indicators that are composed of two lines.
{CC} : Function draws custom colored indicators.
USAGE
Import the library into your script.
Before using any {Draw} function it is necessary to use a {Populate} function.
Choose the appropriate one based on the category, provide the necessary arguments, and then use the {Draw} function, forwarding the arrays generated by the {Populate} function.
This doesn't apply to {Draw_Lines}, {LineFill}, or {Barcolor} functions.
EXAMPLE
import Spacex_trader/MTF_Drawings/1 as tf
//Request lower timeframe data.
Security(simple string Ticker, simple string New_LTF, float Ind) =>
float Value = request.security_lower_tf(Ticker, New_LTF, Ind)
Value
Timeframe = input.timeframe('1', 'Timeframe: ')
tf.Draw_Ind(tf.Populate_LTF_Ind(Security(syminfo.tickerid, Timeframe, ta.rsi(close, 14)), 498, color.purple), 1, true)
FUNCTION LIST
HTF_Candle(BarsBack, BodyBear, BodyBull, BordersBear, BordersBull, WickBear, WickBull, LineStyle, BoxStyle, LineWidth, HTF_Open, HTF_High, HTF_Low, HTF_Close, HTF_Bar_Index)
Populates two arrays with drawing data of the HTF candles.
Parameters:
BarsBack (int) : Bars number to display.
BodyBear (color) : Candle body bear color.
BodyBull (color) : Candle body bull color.
BordersBear (color) : Candle border bear color.
BordersBull (color) : Candle border bull color.
WickBear (color) : Candle wick bear color.
WickBull (color) : Candle wick bull color.
LineStyle (string) : Wick style (Solid-Dotted-Dashed).
BoxStyle (string) : Border style (Solid-Dotted-Dashed).
LineWidth (int) : Wick width.
HTF_Open (float) : HTF open price.
HTF_High (float) : HTF high price.
HTF_Low (float) : HTF low price.
HTF_Close (float) : HTF close price.
HTF_Bar_Index (int) : HTF bar_index.
Returns: Two arrays with drawing data of the HTF candles.
LTF_Candle(BarsBack, BodyBear, BodyBull, BordersBear, BordersBull, WickBear, WickBull, LineStyle, BoxStyle, LineWidth, LTF_Open, LTF_High, LTF_Low, LTF_Close)
Populates two arrays with drawing data of the LTF candles.
Parameters:
BarsBack (int) : Bars number to display.
BodyBear (color) : Candle body bear color.
BodyBull (color) : Candle body bull color.
BordersBear (color) : Candle border bear color.
BordersBull (color) : Candle border bull color.
WickBear (color) : Candle wick bear color.
WickBull (color) : Candle wick bull color.
LineStyle (string) : Wick style (Solid-Dotted-Dashed).
BoxStyle (string) : Border style (Solid-Dotted-Dashed).
LineWidth (int) : Wick width.
LTF_Open (float ) : LTF open price.
LTF_High (float ) : LTF high price.
LTF_Low (float ) : LTF low price.
LTF_Close (float ) : LTF close price.
Returns: Two arrays with drawing data of the LTF candles.
Draw_Candle(Box, Line, Offset)
Draws HTF or LTF candles.
Parameters:
Box (box ) : Box array with drawing data.
Line (line ) : Line array with drawing data.
Offset (int) : Offset of the candles.
Returns: Drawing of the candles.
Populate_HTF_Ind(IndValue, BarsBack, IndColor, HTF_Bar_Index)
Populates one array with drawing data of the HTF indicator.
Parameters:
IndValue (float) : Indicator value.
BarsBack (int) : Indicator lines to display.
IndColor (color) : Indicator color.
HTF_Bar_Index (int) : HTF bar_index.
Returns: An array with drawing data of the HTF indicator.
Populate_LTF_Ind(IndValue, BarsBack, IndColor)
Populates one array with drawing data of the LTF indicator.
Parameters:
IndValue (float ) : Indicator value.
BarsBack (int) : Indicator lines to display.
IndColor (color) : Indicator color.
Returns: An array with drawing data of the LTF indicator.
Draw_Ind(Line, Mult, Exe)
Draws one HTF or LTF indicator.
Parameters:
Line (line ) : Line array with drawing data.
Mult (int) : Coordinates multiplier.
Exe (bool) : Display the indicator.
Returns: Drawing of the indicator.
Populate_HTF_Ind_D(IndValue_1, IndValue_2, BarsBack, IndColor_1, IndColor_2, HTF_Bar_Index)
Populates two arrays with drawing data of the HTF indicators.
Parameters:
IndValue_1 (float) : First indicator value.
IndValue_2 (float) : Second indicator value.
BarsBack (int) : Indicator lines to display.
IndColor_1 (color) : First indicator color.
IndColor_2 (color) : Second indicator color.
HTF_Bar_Index (int) : HTF bar_index.
Returns: Two arrays with drawing data of the HTF indicators.
Populate_LTF_Ind_D(IndValue_1, IndValue_2, BarsBack, IndColor_1, IndColor_2)
Populates two arrays with drawing data of the LTF indicators.
Parameters:
IndValue_1 (float ) : First indicator value.
IndValue_2 (float ) : Second indicator value.
BarsBack (int) : Indicator lines to display.
IndColor_1 (color) : First indicator color.
IndColor_2 (color) : Second indicator color.
Returns: Two arrays with drawing data of the LTF indicators.
Draw_Ind_D(Line_1, Line_2, Mult, Exe_1, Exe_2)
Draws two LTF or HTF indicators.
Parameters:
Line_1 (line ) : First line array with drawing data.
Line_2 (line ) : Second line array with drawing data.
Mult (int) : Coordinates multiplier.
Exe_1 (bool) : Display the first indicator.
Exe_2 (bool) : Display the second indicator.
Returns: Drawings of the indicators.
Barcolor(Box, Line, BarColor)
Colors the candles based on indicators output.
Parameters:
Box (box ) : Candle box array.
Line (line ) : Candle line array.
BarColor (color ) : Indicator color array.
Returns: Colored candles.
Populate_HTF_Ind_D_CC(IndValue_1, IndValue_2, BarsBack, BullColor, BearColor, IndColor_1, HTF_Bar_Index)
Populates two array with drawing data of the HTF indicators with color based on: IndValue_1 >= IndValue_2 ? BullColor : BearColor.
Parameters:
IndValue_1 (float) : First indicator value.
IndValue_2 (float) : Second indicator value.
BarsBack (int) : Indicator lines to display.
BullColor (color) : Bull color.
BearColor (color) : Bear color.
IndColor_1 (color) : First indicator color.
HTF_Bar_Index (int) : HTF bar_index.
Returns: Three arrays with drawing and color data of the HTF indicators.
Populate_LTF_Ind_D_CC(IndValue_1, IndValue_2, BarsBack, BullColor, BearColor, IndColor_1)
Populates two arrays with drawing data of the LTF indicators with color based on: IndValue_1 >= IndValue_2 ? BullColor : BearColor.
Parameters:
IndValue_1 (float ) : First indicator value.
IndValue_2 (float ) : Second indicator value.
BarsBack (int) : Indicator lines to display.
BullColor (color) : Bull color.
BearColor (color) : Bearcolor.
IndColor_1 (color) : First indicator color.
Returns: Three arrays with drawing and color data of the LTF indicators.
Populate_HTF_Hist_CC(HistValue, IndValue_1, IndValue_2, BarsBack, BullColor, BearColor, HTF_Bar_Index)
Populates one array with drawing data of the HTF histogram with color based on: IndValue_1 >= IndValue_2 ? BullColor : BearColor.
Parameters:
HistValue (float) : Indicator value.
IndValue_1 (float) : First indicator value.
IndValue_2 (float) : Second indicator value.
BarsBack (int) : Indicator lines to display.
BullColor (color) : Bull color.
BearColor (color) : Bearcolor.
HTF_Bar_Index (int) : HTF bar_index
Returns: Two arrays with drawing and color data of the HTF histogram.
Populate_LTF_Hist_CC(HistValue, IndValue_1, IndValue_2, BarsBack, BullColor, BearColor)
Populates one array with drawing data of the LTF histogram with color based on: IndValue_1 >= IndValue_2 ? BullColor : BearColor.
Parameters:
HistValue (float ) : Indicator value.
IndValue_1 (float ) : First indicator value.
IndValue_2 (float ) : Second indicator value.
BarsBack (int) : Indicator lines to display.
BullColor (color) : Bull color.
BearColor (color) : Bearcolor.
Returns: Two array with drawing and color data of the LTF histogram.
Populate_LTF_Hist_CC_VA(HistValue, Value, BarsBack, BullColor, BearColor)
Populates one array with drawing data of the LTF histogram with color based on: HistValue >= Value ? BullColor : BearColor.
Parameters:
HistValue (float ) : Indicator value.
Value (float) : First indicator value.
BarsBack (int) : Indicator lines to display.
BullColor (color) : Bull color.
BearColor (color) : Bearcolor.
Returns: Two array with drawing and color data of the LTF histogram.
Populate_HTF_Ind_CC(IndValue, IndValue_1, BarsBack, BullColor, BearColor, HTF_Bar_Index)
Populates one array with drawing data of the HTF indicator with color based on: IndValue >= IndValue_1 ? BullColor : BearColor.
Parameters:
IndValue (float) : Indicator value.
IndValue_1 (float) : Second indicator value.
BarsBack (int) : Indicator lines to display.
BullColor (color) : Bull color.
BearColor (color) : Bearcolor.
HTF_Bar_Index (int) : HTF bar_index
Returns: Two arrays with drawing and color data of the HTF indicator.
Populate_LTF_Ind_CC(IndValue, IndValue_1, BarsBack, BullColor, BearColor)
Populates one array with drawing data of the LTF indicator with color based on: IndValue >= IndValue_1 ? BullColor : BearColor.
Parameters:
IndValue (float ) : Indicator value.
IndValue_1 (float ) : Second indicator value.
BarsBack (int) : Indicator lines to display.
BullColor (color) : Bull color.
BearColor (color) : Bearcolor.
Returns: Two arrays with drawing and color data of the LTF indicator.
Draw_Lines(BarsBack, y1, y2, LineType, Fill)
Draws price lines on indicators.
Parameters:
BarsBack (int) : Indicator lines to display.
y1 (float) : Coordinates of the first line.
y2 (float) : Coordinates of the second line.
LineType (string) : Line type.
Fill (color) : Fill color.
Returns: Drawing of the lines.
LineFill(Upper, Lower, BarsBack, FillColor)
Fills two lines with linefill HTF or LTF.
Parameters:
Upper (line ) : Upper line.
Lower (line ) : Lower line.
BarsBack (int) : Indicator lines to display.
FillColor (color) : Fill color.
Returns: Linefill of the lines.
Populate_LTF_Hist(HistValue, BarsBack, HistColor)
Populates one array with drawing data of the LTF histogram.
Parameters:
HistValue (float ) : Indicator value.
BarsBack (int) : Indicator lines to display.
HistColor (color) : Indicator color.
Returns: One array with drawing data of the LTF histogram.
Populate_HTF_Hist(HistValue, BarsBack, HistColor, HTF_Bar_Index)
Populates one array with drawing data of the HTF histogram.
Parameters:
HistValue (float) : Indicator value.
BarsBack (int) : Indicator lines to display.
HistColor (color) : Indicator color.
HTF_Bar_Index (int) : HTF bar_index.
Returns: One array with drawing data of the HTF histogram.
Draw_Hist(Box, Mult, Exe)
Draws HTF or LTF histogram.
Parameters:
Box (box ) : Box Array.
Mult (int) : Coordinates multiplier.
Exe (bool) : Display the histogram.
Returns: Drawing of the histogram.
OSOM TrendHow to Use the OSOM Breakers Indicator
The OSOM Breakers indicator is a customizable overlay tool for TradingView (Pine Script v5) that identifies market structure patterns, breakouts, breakers (order blocks), and price targets based on pivots, higher highs/lows (HH/LL), and breaks of structure (BoS/MSB). It helps visualize bullish/bearish trends, potential reversals, and target levels, with a focus on institutional "order blocks" (OB) for support/resistance. The indicator supports alerts indirectly through plotted events and is optimized for volatile markets like forex, crypto, or indices.
1. Adding the Indicator to Your Chart
Open TradingView (tradingview.com) and load a chart for your desired asset.
Click the "Indicators" button at the top.
Search for "OSOM Breakers" (if community-shared) or add via Pine Editor:
Open the Pine Editor tab at the bottom.
Paste the provided code (from //@version=5 to the end).
Click "Save" and name it (e.g., "OSOM Breakers").
Click "Add to Chart".
The indicator overlays on your chart with defaults like dashed zigzag lines, HH/LL labels, and green/red colors for bull/bear elements.
2. Configuring Inputs
Click the gear icon next to the indicator name in the legend to access settings.
Inputs are grouped:
Nephew_Sam Market Structure Settings: Pivot strength (default 5; higher for smoother, lower for sensitivity). Toggles for zigzag lines, BoS lines, HH/LL labels, and pattern matches.
Nephew_Sam Bull/Bear Patterns: Pre-defined sequences (e.g., "LL,LH,LL,HH,HL" for bull patterns) with text labels (e.g., "BOS HL 1") and toggles. Customize up to 7 per direction for specific setups like BOS (break of structure) or MSS (market structure shift).
Nephew_Sam Styles: Colors for HH/LL (green up, red down), labels, zigzag style (dashed/dotted), and width (1-4).
Market Structure Break Targets Settings: Max duration (250 bars), calculation method (Percent or ATR), ATR multiplier (2.0). Enable/disable bull/bear MSB/BoS, set colors (green/red), and % targets (100% default).
Breakers Settings: Max breaks (1; increase for stricter breaker confirmation), max duration (1000 bars). Colors for bullish MS (green), bull breaker (red), bearish MS (red), bear breaker (green).
Defaults suit 15m-1h charts; reduce pivot strength for scalping (1m-5m) or increase for daily+. Test patterns on historical data to match your strategy.
3. Interpreting the Visuals and Signals
Zigzag and HH/LL Labels:
Dashed/dotted lines connect pivots; green for upswings, red for downswings (if enabled).
Labels like "HH" (higher high), "LH" (lower high), "LL" (lower low), "HL" (higher low) appear at pivots. Green for bullish, red for bearish.
Pattern Matches:
Labels (e.g., "BOS HL 1") at pivots when sequences match user-defined bull/bear conditions. Up arrows for bull, down for bear.
Use for spotting reversals or continuations (e.g., bull pattern after downtrend signals potential long).
Market Structure Breaks (MSB/BoS):
Solid lines: Green for bullish MSB/BoS (break above prior high), red for bearish (break below prior low).
Labels: "MSB" or "MSS" (shift) at breaks, "BoS" for breaks of structure.
Boxes: Translucent green/red "OB" (order block) boxes highlight ranges before breaks – potential support (post-bull break) or resistance (post-bear).
Targets:
Dotted horizontal/vertical lines extend from breaks to projected targets (percent of range or ATR-based).
Active until hit or expired (after max duration). Green for bull targets (above), red for bear (below).
Breakers:
Dotted lines: Recent MSB/BoS levels that act as breakers (e.g., red dotted for bull breaker).
Plotted shapes: "▲" (green below bar) for bull MSB breakout, "▼" (red above) for bear.
Candle borders: Green for support events (price tests breaker from above), red for resistance (from below).
Overall Direction: Tracks bullish (1) or bearish (-1) based on recent breaks; use for trend bias.
4. Trading Strategies
Breakout Trading: Enter long on green "▲" (bull breakout) above MSB/BoS lines; short on red "▼" below. Target dotted lines (e.g., 100% of prior range).
Order Block (OB) Plays: Buy at green OB boxes (support after bull break), sell at red (resistance after bear). Confirm with support/resistance events.
Pattern-Based Reversals: Long on bull patterns (e.g., "BOS HL") after bearish structure; short on bear patterns. Filter with HH/LL (e.g., HH after LL signals uptrend).
Trend Continuation: In bullish direction, stack longs on BoS breaks; use breakers as trailing stops.
Risk Management: Stops below recent LL (longs) or above HH (shorts). Position size based on ATR (from targets). Avoid choppy markets by disabling patterns.
Timeframes: Scalping (1m-15m with low pivot strength), swing (1h-4h), position (daily with higher strength). Combine with volume indicators for confirmation.
5. Alerts and Automation
No built-in alertcondition(); set manual alerts in TradingView:
Right-click chart > Add Alert > Condition (e.g., "OSOM Breakers - Bull MSB Breakout" crosses 1 for "▲").
Or alert on close crossing MSB/BoS lines (use indicator plots as conditions).
For strategies: Convert to a strategy script by adding strategy() entries/exits based on breaks/patterns.
6. Tips and Best Practices
Asset Suitability: Ideal for trending markets (e.g., BTC/USD, EUR/USD). Less effective in ranging; toggle off zigzag/boxes to reduce clutter.
Performance: Limits (500 lines/boxes/labels) prevent overload; delete oldest automatically. Backtest on replay mode.
Customization: Add custom patterns (e.g., for ICT/SMC concepts like fair value gaps). Match colors to your theme.
Limitations: Relies on pivots – false signals in low-volatility; no volume integration (pair with another indicator). Targets are projections, not guarantees.
Enhancements: Combine with OSOM Trend for volume confirmation. Practice on demo charts.
This indicator provides a structured view of price action, emphasizing breaks and targets for systematic trading. Always validate with multiple timeframes and risk controls.
Cnagda Pure Price ActionCnagda Pure Price Action (CPPA) indicator is a pure price action-based system designed to provide traders with real-time, dynamic analysis of the market. It automatically identifies key candles, support and resistance zones, and potential buy/sell signals by combining price, volume, and multiple popular trend indicators.
How Price Action & Volume Analysis Works
Silver Zone – Logic, Reason, and Trade Planning
Logic & Visualization:
The Silver Zone is created when the closing price is the lowest in the chosen window and volume is the highest in that window.
Visually, a large silver-colored box/rectangle appears on the chart.
Thick horizontal lines (top and bottom) are drawn at the high and low of that candle/bar, extending to the right.
Reasoning:
This combination typically occurs at strong “accumulation” or support areas:
Sellers push the price down to the lowest point, but aggressive buyers step in with high volume, absorbing supply.
Indicates potential exhaustion of selling and likely shift in market control to buyers.
How to Plan Trades Using Silver Zone:
Watch if price returns to the Silver Zone in the future: It often acts as powerful support.
Bullish entries (buys) can be planned when price tests or slightly pierces this zone, especially if new buy signals occur (like yellow/green candle labels).
Place your stop-loss below the bottom line of the Silver Zone.
Target: Look for the nearest resistance or opposing zone, or use indicator’s bullish label as confirmation.
Extra Tip:
Multiple touches of the Silver Zone reinforce its importance, but if price closes deeply below it with high volume, that’s a caution signal—support may be breaking.
Black Zone – Logic, Reason, and Trade Planning (as CPPA):
Logic & Visualization:
The Black Zone is created when the closing price is the highest in the chosen window and volume is the lowest in that window.
Visually, a large black-colored box/rectangle appears on the chart, along with thick horizontal lines at the top (high) and bottom (low) of the candle, extending to the right.
Reasoning:
This combination signals a strong “distribution” or resistance area:
Buyers push the price up to a local high, but low volume means there is not much follow-through or conviction in the move.
Often marks exhaustion where uptrend may pause or reverse, as sellers can soon step in.
How to Plan Trades Using Black Zone:
If price revisits the Black Zone in the future, it often acts as major resistance.
Bearish entries (sells) are considered when price is near, testing, or slightly above the Black Zone—especially if new sell signals appear (like blue/red candle labels).
Place your stop-loss just above the top line of the Black Zone.
Target: Nearest support zone (such as a Silver Zone) or next indicator’s bearish label.
Extra Tip:
Multiple touches of the Black Zone make it stronger, but if price closes far above with rising volume, be cautious—resistance might be breaking.
Support Line – Logic, Reason, and Trade Planning (as Cppa):
Logic & Visualization:
The Support Line is a dynamically drawn dashed line (usually blue) that marks key price levels where the market has previously shown significant buying interest.
The line is generated whenever a candle forms a high price with high volume (orange logic).
The script checks for historical pivot lows, past support zones, and even higher timeframe (HTF) supports, and then extends a blue dashed line from that price level to the right, labeling it (sometimes as “Prev Support Orange, HTF”).
Reasoning:
This line helps you visually identify where demand has been strong enough to hold price from falling further—essentially a floor in the market used by professional traders.
If price approaches or re-tests this line, there’s a good chance buyers will defend it again.
How to Plan Trades Using Support Line:
Watch for price to approach the Support Line during down moves. If you see a bullish candlestick pattern, buy labels (yellow/green), or other indicators aligning, this can be a high-probability entry zone.
Great for planning stop-loss for long trades: place stops just below this line.
Target: Next resistance zone, Black Zone, or the top of the last swing.
Extra Tip:
Multiple confirmations (support line + Silver Zone + bullish label) provide powerful entry signals.
If price closes strongly below the Support Line with volume, be cautious—support may be breaking, and a trend reversal or deeper correction could follow.
Resistance Line – Logic, Reason, and Trade Planning (from CPPA):
Logic & Visualization:
The Resistance Line is a dynamically drawn dashed line (usually purple or red) that identifies price levels where the market has previously faced significant selling pressure.
This line is created when a candle reaches a high price combined with high volume (orange logic), or from a historical pivot high/resistance,
The script also tracks higher timeframe (HTF) resistance lines, labeled as “Prev Resistance Orange, HTF,” and extends these dashed lines to the right across the chart.
Reasoning:
Resistance Lines are visual markers of “supply zones,” where buyers previously failed, and sellers took control.
If the price returns to this line later, sellers may get active again to defend this level, halting the uptrend.
How to Plan Trades Using Resistance Line:
Watch for price to approach the Resistance Line during up moves. If you see bearish candlestick patterns, sell labels (blue/red), or bearish indicator confirmation, this becomes a strong shorting opportunity.
Perfect for placing stop-loss in short trades—put your stop just above the Resistance Line.
Target: Next support zone (Silver Zone) or bottom of the last swing.
If the price breaks above with high volume, avoid shorting—resistance may be failing.
Extra Tip:
Multiple resistances (Resistance Line + Black Zone + bearish label) make short signals stronger.
Choppy movement around this line often signals indecision; wait for a clear rejection before entering trades.
Bullish / Bearish Label – Logic, Reason, and Trade Planning:
Logic & Visualization:
The indicator constantly calculates a "Bull Score" and a "Bear Score" based on several factors:
Trend direction from price slope
Confirmation by popular indicators (RSI, ADX, SAR, CMF, OBV, CCI, Bollinger Bands, TWAP)
Adaptive scoring (higher score for each bullish/bearish condition met)
If Bull Score > Bear Score, the chart displays a green "BULLISH" label (usually below the bar).
If Bear Score > Bull Score, the chart displays a red "BEARISH" label (usually above the bar).
If neither dominates, a "NEUTRAL" label appears.
Reasoning:
The labels summarize complex price action and indicator analysis into a simple, actionable sentiment cue:
Bullish: Majority of conditions indicate buying strength; trend is up.
Bearish: Majority signals show selling pressure; trend is down.
How to Use in Trade Planning:
Use the Bullish label as confirmation to enter or hold long (buy) positions, especially if near support/Silver Zone.
Use the Bearish label to enter/hold short (sell) positions, especially if near resistance/Black Zone.
For best results, combine with candle color, volume analysis, or other labels (yellow/green for buys, blue/red for sells).
Avoid trading against these labels unless you have strong confluence from zones/support levels.
Yellow Label (Buy Signal) – Logic, Reason & Trade Planning:
Logic & Visualization:
The yellow label appears below a candle (label.style_label_up, yloc.belowbar) and marks a potential buy signal.
Script conditions:
The candle must be a “yellow candle” (which means it’s at the local lowest close, not a high, with normal volume).
Volume is decreasing for 2 consecutive candles (current volume < previous volume, previous volume < second previous).
When these conditions are met, a yellow label is plotted below the candle.
Reasoning:
This scenario often marks the end of selling pressure and start of possible accumulation—buyers may be stepping in as sellers exhaust.
Decreasing volume during a local price low means selling is slowing, possibly hinting at a reversal.
How to Trade Using Yellow Label:
Entry: Consider buying at/just above the yellow-labeled candle’s close.
Stop-loss: A bit below the candle’s low (or Silver Zone line, if present).
Target: Next resistance level, Black Zone, or chart’s bullish label.
Extra Tip:
If the yellow label is found at/near a Silver Zone or Support Line, and trend is “Bullish,” the setup gets even stronger.
Avoid trading if overall indicator shows “Bearish.”
Green Label (Buy with Increasing Volume) – Logic, Reason & Trade Planning:
Logic & Visualization:
The green label is plotted below a candle (label.style_label_up, yloc.belowbar) and marks a strong buy signal.
Script conditions:
The candle must be a “yellow candle” (at the local lowest close, normal volume).
Volume is increasing for 2 consecutive candles (current volume > previous volume, previous volume > second previous).
When these conditions are met, a green label is plotted below the candle.
Reasoning:
This scenario signals that buyers are stepping in aggressively at a local price low—the end of a downtrend with strong, rising activity.
Increasing volume at a price low is a classic sign of accumulation, where institutions or large players may be buying.
How to Trade Using Green Label:
Entry: Consider buying at/just above the green-labeled candle’s close for a momentum-based reversal.
Stop-loss: Slightly below the candle’s low, or the Silver Zone/support line if present.
Target: Nearest resistance zone/Black Zone, indicator’s bullish label, or next swing high.
Extra Tip:
If the green label is near other supports (Silver Zone, Support Line), the setup is extra strong.
Use confirmation from Bullish labels or trend signals for best results.
Green label setups are suitable for quick, high momentum trades due to increasing volume
Blue Label (Sell Signal on Decreasing Volume) – Logic, Reason & Trade Planning:
Logic & Visualization:
The blue label is plotted above a candle (label.style_label_down, yloc.abovebar) as a potential sell signal.
Script conditions:
The candle is a “blue candle” (local highest close, but not also lowest, and volume is neither highest nor lowest).
Volume is decreasing over 2 consecutive candles (current volume < previous, previous < two ago).
When these match, a blue label appears above the candle.
Reasoning:
This typically signals buyer exhaustion at a local high: price has gone up, but volume is dropping, suggesting big players may not be buying any more at these levels.
The trend is losing strength, and a reversal or pullback is likely.
How to Trade Using Blue Label:
Entry: Look to sell at/just below the candle with the blue label.
Stop-loss: Just above the candle’s high (or above the Black Zone/resistance if present).
Target: Nearest support, Silver Zone, or a swing low.
Extra Tip:
Blue label signals are stronger if they appear near Black Zones or Resistance Lines, or when the general market label is "Bearish."
As with buy setups, always check for confirmation from trend or volume before trading aggressively.
Blue Label (Sell Signal on Decreasing Volume) – Logic, Reason & Trade Planning:
Logic & Visualization:
The blue label is plotted above a candle (label.style_label_down, yloc.abovebar) as a potential sell signal.
Script conditions:
The candle is a “blue candle” (local highest close, but not also lowest, and volume is neither highest nor lowest).
Volume is decreasing over 2 consecutive candles (current volume < previous, previous < two ago).
When these match, a blue label appears above the candle.
Reasoning:
This typically signals buyer exhaustion at a local high: price has gone up, but volume is dropping, suggesting big players may not be buying any more at these levels.
The trend is losing strength, and a reversal or pullback is likely.
How to Trade Using Blue Label:
Entry: Look to sell at/just below the candle with the blue label.
Stop-loss: Just above the candle’s high (or above the Black Zone/resistance if present).
Target: Nearest support, Silver Zone, or a swing low.
Extra Tip:
Blue label signals are stronger if they appear near Black Zones or Resistance Lines, or when the general market label is "Bearish."
As with buy setups, always check for confirmation from trend or volume before trading aggressively.
Here’s a summary of all key chart labels, zones, and trading logic of your Price Action script:
Silver Zone: Powerful support zone. Created at lowest close + highest volume. Best for buy entries near its lines.
Black Zone: Strong resistance zone. Created at highest close + lowest volume. Ideal for short trades near its levels.
Support Line: Blue dashed line at historical demand; buyers defend here. Look for bullish setups when price approaches.
Resistance Line: Purple/red dashed line at supply; sellers defend here. Great for bearish setups when price nears.
Bullish/Bearish Labels: Summarize trend direction using price action + multiple indicator confirmations. Plan buys, holds on bullish; sells, shorts on bearish.
Yellow Label: Buy signal on decreasing volume and local price low. Entry above candle, stop below, target next resistance.
Green Label: Strong buy on increasing volume at a price low. Entry for momentum trade, stop below, target next zone.
Blue Label: Sell signal on dropping volume and local price high. Entry below candle, stop above, target next support.
Best Practices:
Always combine zone/label signals for higher probability trades.
Use stop-loss near zones/lines for risk management.
Prefer trading in the trend direction (bullish/bearish label agrees with your entry).
if Any Question, Suggestion Feel free to ask
Disclaimer:
All information provided by this indicator is for educational and analysis purposes only, and should not be considered financial advice.
Trend Fib Zone Bounce (TFZB) [KedArc Quant]Description:
Trend Fib Zone Bounce (TFZB) trades with the latest confirmed Supply/Demand zone using a single, configurable Fib pullback (0.3/0.5/0.6). Trade only in the direction of the most recent zone and use a single, configurable fib level for pullback entries.
• Detects market structure via confirmed swing highs/lows using a rolling window.
• Draws Supply/Demand zones (bearish/bullish rectangles) from the latest MSS (CHOCH or BOS) event.
• Computes intra zone Fib guide rails and keeps them extended in real time.
• Triggers BUY only inside bullish zones and SELL only inside bearish zones when price touches the selected fib and closes back beyond it (bounce confirmation).
• Optional labels print BULL/BEAR + fib next to the triangle markers.
What it does
Finds structure using confirmed swing highs/lows (you choose the confirmation length).
Builds the latest zone (bullish = demand, bearish = supply) after a CHOCH/BOS event.
Draws intra-zone “guide rails” (Fib lines) and extends them live.
Signals only with the trend of that zone:
BUY inside a bullish zone when price tags the selected Fib and closes back above it.
SELL inside a bearish zone when price tags the selected Fib and closes back below it.
Optional labels print BULL/BEAR + Fib next to triangles for quick context
Why this is different
Most “zone + fib + signal” tools bolt together several indicators, or fire counter-trend signals because they don’t fully respect structure. TFZB is intentionally minimal:
Single bias source: the latest confirmed zone defines direction; nothing else overrides it.
Single entry rule: one Fib bounce (0.3/0.5/0.6 selectable) inside that zone—no counter-trend trades by design.
Clean visuals: you can show only the most recent zone, clamp overlap, and keep just the rails that matter.
Deterministic & transparent: every plot/label comes from the code you see—no external series or hidden smoothing
How it helps traders
Cuts decision noise: you always know the bias and the only entry that matters right now.
Forces discipline: if price isn’t inside the active zone, you don’t trade.
Adapts to volatility: pick 0.3 in strong trends, 0.5 as the default, 0.6 in chop.
Non-repainting zones: swings are confirmed after Structure Length bars, then used to build zones that extend forward (they don’t “teleport” later)
How it works (details)
*Structure confirmation
A swing high/low is only confirmed after Structure Length bars have elapsed; the dot is plotted back on the original bar using offset. Expect a confirmation delay of about Structure Length × timeframe.
*Zone creation
After a CHOCH/BOS (momentum shift / break of prior swing), TFZB draws the new Supply/Demand zone from the swing anchors and sets it active.
*Fib guide rails
Inside the active zone TFZB projects up to five Fib lines (defaults: 0.3 / 0.5 / 0.7) and extends them as time passes.
*Entry logic (with-trend only)
BUY: bar’s low ≤ fib and close > fib inside a bullish zone.
SELL: bar’s high ≥ fib and close < fib inside a bearish zone.
*Optionally restrict to one signal per zone to avoid over-trading.
(Optional) Aggressive confirm-bar entry
When do the swing dots print?
* The code confirms a swing only after `structureLen` bars have elapsed since that candidate high/low.
* On a 5-min chart with `structureLen = 10`, that’s about 50 minutes later.
* When the swing confirms, the script plots the dot back on the original bar (via `offset = -structureLen`). So you *see* the dot on the old bar, but it only appears on the chart once the confirming bar arrives.
> Practical takeaway: expect swing markers to appear roughly `structureLen × timeframe` later. Zones and signals are built from those confirmed swings.
Best timeframe for this Indicator
Use the timeframe that matches your holding period and the noise level of the instrument:
* Intraday :
* 5m or 15m are the sweet spots.
* Suggested `structureLen`:
* 5m: 10–14 (confirmation delay \~50–70 min)
* 15m: 8–10 (confirmation delay \~2–2.5 hours)
* Keep Entry Fib at 0.5 to start; try 0.3 in strong trends, 0.6 in chop.
* Tip: avoid the first 10–15 minutes after the open; let the initial volatility set the early structure.
* Swing/overnight:
* 1h or 4h.
* `structureLen`:
* 1h: 6–10 (6–10 hours confirmation)
* 4h: 5–8 (20–32 hours confirmation)
* 1m scalping: not recommended here—the confirmation lag relative to the noise makes zones less reliable.
Inputs (all groups)
Structure
• Show Swing Points (structureTog)
o Plots small dots on the bar where a swing point is confirmed (offset back by Structure Length).
• Structure Length (structureLen)
o Lookback used to confirm swing highs/lows and determine local structure. Higher = fewer, stronger swings; lower = more reactive.
Zones
• Show Last (zoneDispNum)
o Maximum number of zones kept on the chart when Display All Zones is off.
• Display All Zones (dispAll)
o If on, ignores Show Last and keeps all zones/levels.
• Zone Display (zoneFilter): Bullish Only / Bearish Only / Both
o Filters which zone types are drawn and eligible for signals.
• Clean Up Level Overlap (noOverlap)
o Prevents fib lines from overlapping when a new zone starts near the previous one (clamps line start/end times for readability).
Fib Levels
Each row controls whether a fib is drawn and how it looks:
• Toggle (f1Tog…f5Tog): Show/hide a given fib line.
• Level (f1Lvl…f5Lvl): Numeric ratio in . Defaults active: 0.3, 0.5, 0.7 (0 and 1 off by default).
• Line Style (f1Style…f5Style): Solid / Dashed / Dotted.
• Bull/Bear Colors (f#BullColor, f#BearColor): Per-fib color in bullish vs bearish zones.
Style
• Structure Color: Dot color for confirmed swing points.
• Bullish Zone Color / Bearish Zone Color: Rectangle fills (transparent by default).
Signals
• Entry Fib for Signals (entryFibSel): Choose 0.3, 0.5 (default), or 0.6 as the trigger line.
• Show Buy/Sell Signals (showSignals): Toggles triangle markers on/off.
• One Signal Per Zone (oneSignalPerZone): If on, suppresses additional entries within the same zone after the first trigger.
• Show Signal Text Labels (Bull/Bear + Fib) (showSignalLabels): Adds a small label next to each triangle showing zone bias and the fib used (e.g., BULL 0.5 or BEAR 0.3).
How TFZB decides signals
With trend only:
• BUY
1. Latest active zone is bullish.
2. Current bar’s close is inside the zone (between top and bottom).
3. The bar’s low ≤ selected fib and it closes > selected fib (bounce).
• SELL
1. Latest active zone is bearish.
2. Current bar’s close is inside the zone.
3. The bar’s high ≥ selected fib and it closes < selected fib.
Markers & labels
• BUY: triangle up below the bar; optional label “BULL 0.x” above it.
• SELL: triangle down above the bar; optional label “BEAR 0.x” below it.
Right-Panel Swing Log (Table)
What it is
A compact, auto-updating log of the most recent Swing High/Low events, printed in the top-right of the chart.
It helps you see when a pivot formed, when it was confirmed, and at what price—so you know the earliest bar a zone-based signal could have appeared.
Columns
Type – Swing High or Swing Low.
Date – Calendar date of the swing bar (follows the chart’s timezone).
Swing @ – Time of the original swing bar (where the dot is drawn).
Confirm @ – Time of the bar that confirmed that swing (≈ Structure Length × timeframe after the swing). This is also the earliest moment a new zone/entry can be considered.
Price – The swing price (high for SH, low for SL).
Why it’s useful
Clarity on repaint/confirmation: shows the natural delay between a swing forming and being usable—no guessing.
Planning & journaling: quick reference of today’s pivots and prices for notes/backtesting.
Scanning intraday: glance to see if you already have a confirmed zone (and therefore valid fib-bounce entries), or if you’re still waiting.
Context for signals: if a fib-bounce triangle appears before the time listed in Confirm @, it’s not a valid trade (you were too early).
Settings (Inputs → Logging)
Log swing times / Show table – turn the table on/off.
Rows to keep – how many recent entries to display.
Show labels on swing bar – optional tags on the chart (“Swing High 11:45”, “Confirm SH 14:15”) that match the table.
Recommended defaults
• Structure Length: 10–20 for intraday; 20–40 for swing.
• Entry Fib for Signals: 0.5 to start; try 0.3 in stronger trends and 0.6 in choppier markets.
• One Signal Per Zone: ON (prevents over trading).
• Zone Display: Both.
• Fib Lines: Keep 0.3/0.5/0.7 on; turn on 0 and 1 only if you need anchors.
Alerts
Two alert conditions are available:
• BUY signal – fires when a with trend bullish bounce at the selected fib occurs inside a bullish zone.
• SELL signal – fires when a with trend bearish bounce at the selected fib occurs inside a bearish zone.
Create alerts from the chart’s Alerts panel and select the desired condition. Use Once Per Bar Close to avoid intrabar flicker.
Notes & tips
• Swing dots are confirmed only after Structure Length bars, so they plot back in time; zones built from these confirmed swings do not repaint (though they extend as new bars form).
• If you don’t see a BUY where you expect one, check: (1) Is the active zone bullish? (2) Did the candle’s low actually pierce the selected fib and close above it? (3) Is One Signal Per Zone suppressing a second entry?
• You can hide visual clutter by reducing Show Last to 1–3 while keeping Display All Zones off.
Glossary
• CHOCH (Change of Character): A shift where price breaks beyond the last opposite swing while local momentum flips.
• BOS (Break of Structure): A cleaner break beyond the prior swing level in the current momentum direction.
• MSS: Either CHOCH or BOS – any event that spawns a new zone.
Extension ideas (optional)
• Add fib extensions (1.272 / 1.618) for target lines.
• Zone quality score using ATR normalization to filter weak impulses.
• HTF filter to only accept zones aligned with a higher timeframe trend.
⚠️ Disclaimer This script is provided for educational purposes only.
Past performance does not guarantee future results.
Trading involves risk, and users should exercise caution and use proper risk management when applying this strategy.
Multiple (12) Strong Buy/Sell Signals + Momentum
Indicator Manual: "Multiple (12) Strong Buy/Sell Signals + Momentum"
This indicator is designed to identify strong buy and sell signals based on 12 configurable conditions, which include a variety of technical analysis methods such as trend-following indicators, pattern recognition, volume analysis, and momentum oscillators. It allows for customizable alerts and visual cues on the chart. The indicator helps traders spot potential entry and exit points by displaying buy and sell signals based on the selected conditions.
Key Observations:
• The script integrates multiple indicators and pattern recognition methods to provide comprehensive buy/sell signals.
• Trend-based indicators like EMAs and MACD are combined with pattern recognition (flags, triangles) and momentum-based signals (RSI, ADX, and volume analysis).
• User customization is a core feature, allowing adjustments to the conditions and thresholds for more tailored signals.
• The script is designed to be responsive to market conditions, with multiple conditions filtering out noise to generate reliable signals.
________________________________________
Key Features:
1. 12 Combined Buy/Sell Signal Conditions: This indicator incorporates a diverse set of conditions based on trend analysis, momentum, and price patterns.
2. Minimum Conditions Input: You can adjust the threshold of conditions that need to be met for the buy/sell signals to appear.
3. Alert Customization: Set alert thresholds for both buy and sell signals.
4. Dynamic Visualization: Buy and sell signals are shown as triangles on the chart, with momentum signals highlighted as circles.
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Detailed Description of the 12 Conditions:
1. Exponential Moving Averages (EMA):
o Conditions: The indicator uses EMAs with periods 3, 8, and 13 for quick trend-following signals.
o Bullish Signal: EMA3 > EMA8 > EMA13 (Bullish stack).
o Bearish Signal: EMA3 < EMA8 < EMA13 (Bearish stack).
o Reversal Signal: The crossing over or under of these EMAs can signify trend reversals.
2. MACD (Moving Average Convergence Divergence):
o Fast MACD (2, 7, 3) is used to confirm trends quickly.
o Bullish Signal: When the MACD line crosses above the signal line.
o Bearish Signal: When the MACD line crosses below the signal line.
3. Donchian Channel:
o Tracks the highest high and lowest low over a given period (default 20).
o Breakout Signal: Price breaking above the upper band is bullish; breaking below the lower band is bearish.
4. VWAP (Volume-Weighted Average Price):
o Above VWAP: Bullish condition (price above VWAP).
o Below VWAP: Bearish condition (price below VWAP).
5. EMA Stacking & Reversal:
o Tracks the order of EMAs (3, 8, 13) to confirm strong trends and reversals.
o Bullish Reversal: EMA3 < EMA8 < EMA13 followed by a crossing to bullish.
o Bearish Reversal: EMA3 > EMA8 > EMA13 followed by a crossing to bearish.
6. Bull/Bear Flags:
o Bull Flag: Characterized by a strong price movement (flagpole) followed by a pullback and breakout.
o Bear Flag: Similar to Bull Flag but in the opposite direction.
7. Triangle Patterns (Ascending and Descending):
o Detects ascending and descending triangles using pivot highs and lows.
o Ascending Triangle: Higher lows and flat resistance.
o Descending Triangle: Lower highs and flat support.
8. Volume Sensitivity:
o Identifies price moves with significant volume increases.
o High Volume: When current volume is significantly above the moving average volume (set to 1.2x of the average).
9. Momentum Indicators:
o RSI (Relative Strength Index): Confirms overbought and oversold levels with thresholds set at 65 (overbought) and 35 (oversold).
o ADX (Average Directional Index): Confirms strong trends when ADX > 28.
o Momentum Up: Momentum is upward with strong volume and bullish RSI/ADX conditions.
o Momentum Down: Momentum is downward with strong volume and bearish RSI/ADX conditions.
10. Bollinger & Keltner Squeeze:
o Squeeze Condition: A contraction in both Bollinger Bands and Keltner Channels indicates low volatility, signaling a potential breakout.
o Squeeze Breakout: Price breaking above or below the squeeze bands.
11. 3 Consecutive Candles Condition:
o Bullish: Price rises for three consecutive candles with higher highs and lows.
o Bearish: Price falls for three consecutive candles with lower highs and lows.
12. Williams %R and Stochastic RSI:
o Williams %R: A momentum oscillator with signals when the line crosses certain levels.
o Stochastic RSI: Provides overbought/oversold levels with smoother signals.
o Combined Signals: You can choose whether to require both WPR and StochRSI to signal a buy/sell.
________________________________________
User Inputs (Inputs Tab):
1. Minimum Conditions for Buy/Sell:
o min_conditions: Number of conditions required to trigger a buy/sell signal on the chart (1 to 12).
o Alert_min_conditions: User-defined alert threshold (how many conditions must be met before an alert is triggered).
2. Donchian Channel Settings:
o Show Donchian: Toggle visibility of the Donchian channel.
o Donchian Length: The length of the Donchian Channel (default 20).
3. Bull/Bear Flag Settings:
o Bull Flag Flagpole Strength: ATR multiplier to define the strength of the flagpole.
o Bull Flag Pullback Length: Length of pullback for the bull flag pattern.
o Bull Flag EMA Length: EMA length used to confirm trend during bull flag pattern.
Similar settings exist for Bear Flag patterns.
4. Momentum Indicators:
o RSI Length: Period for calculating the RSI (default 9).
o RSI Overbought: Overbought threshold for the RSI (default 65).
o RSI Oversold: Oversold threshold for the RSI (default 35).
5. Bollinger/Keltner Squeeze Settings:
o Squeeze Width Threshold: The maximum width of the Bollinger and Keltner Bands for squeeze conditions.
6. Stochastic RSI Settings:
o Stochastic RSI Length: The period for calculating the Stochastic RSI.
7. WPR Settings:
o WPR Length: Period for calculating Williams %R (default 14).
________________________________________
User Inputs (Style Tab):
1. Signal Plotting:
o Control the display and colors of the buy/sell signals, momentum indicators, and pattern signals on the chart.
o Buy/Sell Signals: Can be customized with different colors and shapes (triangle up for buys, triangle down for sells).
o Momentum Signals: Custom circle placement for momentum-up or momentum-down signals.
2. Donchian Channel:
o Show Donchian: Toggle visibility of the Donchian upper, lower, and middle bands.
o Band Colors: Choose the color for each band (upper, lower, middle).
________________________________________
How to Use the Indicator:
1. Adjust Minimum Conditions: Set the minimum number of conditions that must be met for a signal to appear. For example, set it to 5 if you want only stronger signals.
2. Set Alert Threshold: Define the number of conditions needed to trigger an alert. This can be different from the minimum conditions for visual signals.
3. Customize Appearance: Modify the colors and styles of the signals to match your preferences.
________________________________________
Conclusion:
This comprehensive trading indicator uses a combination of trend-following, pattern recognition, and momentum-based conditions to help you spot potential buy and sell opportunities. By adjusting the input settings, you can fine-tune it to match your specific trading strategy, making it a versatile tool for different market conditions.
Signal Reliability Based on Condition Count
The reliability of the buy/sell signals increases as more conditions are met. Here's a breakdown of the probabilities:
1. 1-3 Conditions Met: Lower Probability
o Signals that meet only 1-3 conditions tend to have lower reliability and are considered less probable. These signals may represent false positives or weaker market movements, and traders should approach them with caution.
2. 4 Conditions Met: More Reliable Signal
o When 4 conditions are met, the signal becomes more reliable. This indicates that multiple indicators or market patterns are aligning, increasing the likelihood of a valid buy/sell opportunity. While not foolproof, it's a stronger indication that the market may be moving in a particular direction.
3. 5-6 Conditions Met: Strong Signal
o A signal meeting 5-6 conditions is considered a strong signal. This indicates a well-confirmed move, with several technical indicators and market factors aligning to suggest a higher probability of success. These are the signals that traders often prioritize.
4. 7+ Conditions Met: Rare and High-Confidence Signal
o Signals that meet 7 or more conditions are rare and should be considered high-confidence signals. These represent a significant alignment of multiple factors, and while they are less frequent, they are highly reliable when they do occur. Traders can be more confident in acting on these signals, but they should still monitor market conditions for confirmation.
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You can adjust the number of conditions as needed, but this breakdown should give a clear structure on how the signal strength correlates with the number of conditions met!
BTC Markup/Markdown Zones by Koenigsegg📈 BTC Markup/Markdown Zones
A handcrafted indicator designed to mark Bitcoin's most critical High Time Frame (HTF) structure shifts. This tool overlays true institutional-level Markup and Markdown Zones, selected manually after deep market review. Whether you're testing strategies or actively trading, this tool gives you the bigger picture at all times.
🔍 Key Features:
✅ HTF Markup & Markdown Zones
Every zone is manually selected — no indicators, no repainting. Just raw market history and real structure.
✅ Two Display Modes
• Background Zones — soft overlays with low opacity for visual context — with the option to increase opacity manually if desired.
• Start Candle Highlight — sharply highlighted candle marking the final pivot before a macro reversal.
✅ Custom Color Controls (Style Tab)
All visual styling lives in the Style tab, with clearly labeled fields:
• Markup Zone
• Markdown Zone
• Start Candle Highlight Markup
• Start Candle Highlight Markdown
✅ Minimal Input Section
Just one toggle: display mode. Everything else is kept clean and intuitive.
🧠 Purpose:
This script is made for any timeframe:
• Zoom into lower timeframes to know whether you're trading inside a Markup or Markdown
• Use it during strategy testing for true structural awareness
📅 Handpicked Macro Turning Points:
Each zone originates from a manually confirmed candle — the last meaningful candle before a shift in control between bulls and bears:
• FRI 19 AUG 2011 12PM – MARK DOWN
• THU 20 OCT 2011 12AM – MARK UP
• WED 10 APR 2013 12PM – MARK DOWN
• FRI 12 APR 2013 12PM – MARK UP
• SAT 30 NOV 2013 12AM – MARK DOWN
• WED 14 JAN 2015 12PM – MARK UP
• SUN 17 DEC 2017 12PM – MARK DOWN
• SAT 15 DEC 2018 12PM – MARK UP
• WED 14 APR 2021 4AM – MARK DOWN
• TUE 22 JUN 2021 12PM – MARK UP
• WED 10 NOV 2021 12PM – MARK DOWN
• MON 21 NOV 2022 8PM – MARK UP
• THU 14 MAR 2024 4AM – MARK DOWN
• MON 5 AUG 2024 12PM – MARK UP
• MON 20 JAN 2025 4AM – MARK DOWN
💡 Zones are manually updated by me after each new confirmed Markup or Markdown.
🧬 Fractal Structure for MTF Systems
Price is fractal — meaning the same principles of structure repeat across all timeframes. In Version 2, this tool evolves by introducing manually selected sub-zones inside each High Time Frame (HTF) Markup or Markdown. These sub-zones reflect Medium Timeframe (MTF) structure shifts, offering precision for traders who operate on both intraday and swing levels.
This makes the indicator ideal for low timeframe (LTF) Markup/Markdown awareness — whether you're managing 15m entries or building multi-timeframe confluence systems.
No auto-zones. No guesswork. Just clean, intentional structure division within the broader trend, handpicked for maximum clarity and edge.
💡 Pro Tip:
When price is inside a Markup Zone, shorting becomes riskier — you're trading against a macro bullish structure.
When inside a Markdown Zone, longing becomes riskier — you're fighting against confirmed bearish momentum.
Use this tool to stay aligned with the broader move, especially when zoomed into smaller timeframes or managing entries/exits during intraday setups.
📈 Markup Phase – Bullish Sentiment
Definition: A period where price makes higher highs and higher lows — the uptrend is in full force.
Why sentiment is bullish:
- Institutions and smart money are already positioned long.
- Public/institutional demand drives prices up.
- Momentum is supported by positive news, breakouts, and FOMO.
- Higher highs confirm buyers are in control.
📉 Markdown Phase – Bearish Sentiment
Definition: A period where price makes lower lows and lower highs — clear downtrend.
Why sentiment is bearish:
- Distribution has already occurred, and supply outweighs demand.
- Smart money is short or sidelined, waiting for deeper prices.
- Panic selling or trend-following traders add downside momentum.
- Lower lows confirm sellers are in control.
❌ Trading Against the Trend — Consequences:
-Reduced Probability of Success
-You’re fighting the dominant flow. Most participants are pushing in the opposite direction.
-Drawdowns & Stop-Outs
-Countertrend trades often get wicked or flushed before any meaningful move, especially without structure-based entries.
-Low Risk-Reward Ratio
-Trends offer sustained moves. Countertrend trades may have small take-profit zones or chop.
-Mental Drain & Doubt
-Fighting momentum causes anxiety, second-guessing, and emotional reactions.
-Missed Opportunities
-Focusing on fighting the trend makes you blind to the high-probability setups with the trend.
-Increased Transaction Costs
-More stop-outs and re-entries mean more fees, more friction.
-FOMO from Watching the Trend Run
-Entering countertrend means you might watch the trend explode without you.
-Confirmation Bias & Stubbornness
-Countertrend traders often look for reasons to justify staying in the wrong direction — leading to bigger losses.
🧠 Summary
In markup = bulls dominate → you swim with the current.
In markdown = bears dominate → going long is like pushing a rock uphill.
Trading with the trend is not just safer, it's smarter. The edge lives in momentum — not ego.
⚠️ Disclaimer
This indicator is for educational and analytical use only. It is not financial advice and should not be relied on for decision-making without personal analysis.
This is not a predictive tool. No indicator can forecast upcoming price movements.
What you see here is based purely on past market behavior — specifically, historical tops and bottoms that marked the start of confirmed reversals.
This script does not know where the next reversal begins, nor can it determine where a new Markup or Markdown starts or ends. It is designed to provide context, not prediction.
Always trade with responsibility and perform your own due diligence.
Turbo Oscillator [RunRox]Introducing Turbo Oscillator by RunRox, our new indicator that combines a multitude of useful and unique features, which we will detail in this post.
List of Advanced Technologies:
Real-Time Divergences: Detects discrepancies between price movements and oscillator indicators to forecast potential price reversals.
Real-Time Hidden Divergences: We identify hidden divergences in real-time. These are not the standard type of divergences; they are opposite to regular divergences, providing unique insights into potential market movements.
Overbought and Oversold Zones: Identifies areas where the market is potentially overextended, suggesting possible entry and exit points.
Signal Line: Indicates the market direction, helping traders to quickly understand current trends.
Money Flow Histogram: Shows the flow of money into and out of the market, providing insights into buying and selling pressure.
Predicted Reversal Zones: Pinpoints areas where the market might experience reversals, aiding in strategic planning and risk management. These zones also serve as potential areas for taking profits, enhancing their utility for exit strategy planning.
Customizable Alerts: You can flexibly set up alerts for any events detected by our indicator, ensuring you stay informed about critical market movements.
To begin with, I would like to describe the difference between classic divergences and hidden divergences.
As you can see, these are opposite situations. Our oscillator identifies both types of divergences and displays them in real-time.
Divergences can serve as points where the price might reverse in the opposite direction, making both classic and hidden divergences powerful tools for spotting reversal points. I'll show a few examples of how divergences are used in our oscillator.
Classic Divergences - which we identify in real-time. As you can see, the price often reacts strongly to the formation of these divergences, frequently changing its direction.
Hidden Divergences - we also observe frequent movement in the opposite direction on the chart. The advantage of our indicator is that we show divergences in real-time without delays, allowing you to react immediately to trend changes.
Overbought and Oversold Zones - These zones allow you to see trend changes when the price is clearly overbought or oversold. When the color changes from a contrasting shade to a neutral one, you can observe the trend shift. The lines work by combining the positivity/negativity of the histogram, the positivity/negativity of the signal line, and the direction of the signal line (red/green). This sophisticated interaction provides precise insights into market conditions, making it an invaluable tool for traders.
Signal Line - This provides insights into trend changes and price reversals. The points on the line better indicate the beginning of a trend shift. These points can vary in size, offering a clearer understanding of the strength of the emerging trend. This feature works in combination with RSI, Stochastic, and MFI. RSI and MFI are top-tier indicators, while Stochastic adds responsiveness and sensitivity to trend changes, ensuring you capture every market movement accurately and promptly.
Money Flow Histogram - As shown in the example, our histogram displays the divergence between money flow and the actual price. You can see that while the price is rising, the money flow is decreasing, indicating insufficient demand for the asset and an imminent trend change. This feature uses MFI with an extended period, providing a more comprehensive and accurate analysis of market conditions. The extended period enhances the reliability of the Money Flow Index, making it an essential tool for identifying subtle shifts in market dynamics.
Predicted Reversal Zones - We automatically identify potential price reversal zones and display them above our overbought and oversold zones. In cases of strong overbought or oversold conditions, we detect potential price pullbacks and mark the beginning of a trend change. This helps you better identify trend shifts. We recommend considering these zones as potential take profit points for your trades.
Customizable Alerts - Our flexible alert system allows you to receive notifications only for the events you are interested in. These can include:
1. Classic Divergences
2. Hidden Divergences
3. Overbought or Oversold conditions on the status line
4. Strong Overbought or Oversold conditions on the status line
5. Signals from the signal line
6. Reversal zones in any direction
Our oscillator is a unique indicator that provides a comprehensive understanding of price movements. It can be used as a standalone tool for analyzing price action.
Here are a few examples of using our Oscillator in practice:
In the example above, you can see three conditions that have formed for a potential trade:
1. Clear overbought condition with a formed reversal point.
2. Decreasing Money Flow Index diverging from the rising price.
3. Formed classic divergence.
The entry point could be the formed divergence, while the exit point could be the overbought condition at the bottom of the oscillator along with the reversal points.
Here's another example of using hidden divergence, where you can see three conditions for a potential trade:
1. Overbought zone
2. Formed hidden divergence
3. Start of bearish movement indicated by the signal line
You can enter the trade either when the hidden divergence forms or wait for confirmation of the trend change by the signal line and enter the trade when the corresponding signal forms on the signal line. The exit point could be the opposite reversal point or the formation of a new hidden divergence.
We have demonstrated a few examples of how you can use our indicator, but we are confident that you will find many more applications in your own strategies.
Oscillator offers a variety of customizable parameters to tailor the indicator to your trading preferences. Here’s what our settings include:
Signal Line
Turn On/Off: Enable or disable the signal line.
Length: Set the length period for the signal line calculation.
Smooth: Adjust the smoothing level of the signal line for more accurate display.
Histogram
Turn On/Off: Enable or disable the histogram.
Length: Set the length period for the histogram calculation.
Smooth: Adjust the smoothing level of the histogram.
Other
Show Divergence Line: Display divergence lines on the chart.
Show Hidden Divergence: Display hidden divergences.
Show Status Line: Show the status line indicating overbought or oversold conditions.
Show TP Signal: Display signals for take profit.
Show Reversal Points: Display potential trend reversal points.
Delete Broken Divergence Lines: Remove broken divergence lines from the chart.
Alerts Customization
Signal Line Bull/Bear: Set alerts for bullish or bearish signals from the signal line.
TP Bull/Bear: Set alerts for take profit signals.
Status Bull/Bear: Set alerts for bullish or bearish status conditions.
Status Bull+/Bear+: Set enhanced alerts for stronger bullish or bearish status conditions.
Divergence Bull/Bear: Set alerts for bullish or bearish divergences.
Hidden Divergence Bull/Bear: Set alerts for hidden bullish or bearish divergences.
With these comprehensive settings, you can fine-tune the Oscillator to perfectly fit your trading strategy and preferences.
Our indicator utilizes technologies such as RSI, Stochastic, and Money Flow Index, with numerous enhancements from our team. It includes exclusive features such as real-time detection of hidden and classic divergences, identification of reversal points using our unique methodology, and much more.
Disclaimer:
While we consider our Turbo Oscillator to be an excellent tool, it is important to understand that past performance is not indicative of future results. We recommend approaching market analysis comprehensively, using a combination of tools and techniques to make well-informed trading decisions. Always consider the full range of market data and risks when using any trading indicator.
ENTRY CONFIRMATION V2// This source code is subject to the terms of the Mozilla Public License 2.0 at mozilla.org
// © Zerocapitalmx
//@version=5
indicator(title="ENTRY CONFIRMATION V2", format=format.price, timeframe="", timeframe_gaps=true)
len = input.int(title="RSI Period", minval=1, defval=50)
src = input(title="RSI Source", defval=close)
lbR = input(title="Pivot Lookback Right", defval=5)
lbL = input(title="Pivot Lookback Left", defval=5)
rangeUpper = input(title="Max of Lookback Range", defval=60)
rangeLower = input(title="Min of Lookback Range", defval=5)
plotBull = input(title="Plot Bullish", defval=true)
plotHiddenBull = input(title="Plot Hidden Bullish", defval=false)
plotBear = input(title="Plot Bearish", defval=true)
plotHiddenBear = input(title="Plot Hidden Bearish", defval=false)
bearColor = color.red
bullColor = color.green
hiddenBullColor = color.new(color.green, 80)
hiddenBearColor = color.new(color.red, 80)
textColor = color.white
noneColor = color.new(color.white, 100)
osc = ta.rsi(src, len)
rsiPeriod = input.int(50, minval = 1, title = "RSI Period")
bandLength = input.int(1, minval = 1, title = "Band Length")
lengthrsipl = input.int(1, minval = 0, title = "Fast MA on RSI")
lengthtradesl = input.int(50, minval = 1, title = "Slow MA on RSI")
r = ta.rsi(src, rsiPeriod) // RSI of Close
ma = ta.sma(r, bandLength ) // Moving Average of RSI
offs = (1.6185 * ta.stdev(r, bandLength)) // Offset
fastMA = ta.sma(r, lengthrsipl) // Moving Average of RSI 2 bars back
slowMA = ta.sma(r, lengthtradesl) // Moving Average of RSI 7 bars back
plot(slowMA, "Slow MA", color=color.black, linewidth=1) // Plot Slow MA
plot(osc, title="RSI", linewidth=2, color=color.purple)
hline(50, title="Middle Line", color=#787B86, linestyle=hline.style_dotted)
obLevel = hline(70, title="Overbought", color=#787B86, linestyle=hline.style_dotted)
osLevel = hline(30, title="Oversold", color=#787B86, linestyle=hline.style_dotted)
plFound = na(ta.pivotlow(osc, lbL, lbR)) ? false : true
phFound = na(ta.pivothigh(osc, lbL, lbR)) ? false : true
_inRange(cond) =>
bars = ta.barssince(cond == true)
rangeLower <= bars and bars <= rangeUpper
//------------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Regular Bullish
// Osc: Higher Low
oscHL = osc > ta.valuewhen(plFound, osc , 1) and _inRange(plFound )
// Price: Lower Low
priceLL = low < ta.valuewhen(plFound, low , 1)
bullCond = plotBull and priceLL and oscHL and plFound
plot(
plFound ? osc : na,
offset=-lbR,
title="Regular Bullish",
linewidth=1,
color=(bullCond ? bullColor : noneColor)
)
plotshape(
bullCond ? osc : na,
offset=-lbR,
title="Regular Bullish Label",
text=" EDM ",
style=shape.labelup,
location=location.absolute,
color=bullColor,
textcolor=textColor
)
//------------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Hidden Bullish
// Osc: Lower Low
oscLL = osc < ta.valuewhen(plFound, osc , 1) and _inRange(plFound )
// Price: Higher Low
priceHL = low > ta.valuewhen(plFound, low , 1)
hiddenBullCond = plotHiddenBull and priceHL and oscLL and plFound
plot(
plFound ? osc : na,
offset=-lbR,
title="Hidden Bullish",
linewidth=1,
color=(hiddenBullCond ? hiddenBullColor : noneColor)
)
plotshape(
hiddenBullCond ? osc : na,
offset=-lbR,
title="Hidden Bullish Label",
text=" EDM ",
style=shape.labelup,
location=location.absolute,
color=bullColor,
textcolor=textColor
)
//------------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Regular Bearish
// Osc: Lower High
oscLH = osc < ta.valuewhen(phFound, osc , 1) and _inRange(phFound )
// Price: Higher High
priceHH = high > ta.valuewhen(phFound, high , 1)
bearCond = plotBear and priceHH and oscLH and phFound
plot(
phFound ? osc : na,
offset=-lbR,
title="Regular Bearish",
linewidth=1,
color=(bearCond ? bearColor : noneColor)
)
plotshape(
bearCond ? osc : na,
offset=-lbR,
title="Regular Bearish Label",
text=" EDM ",
style=shape.labeldown,
location=location.absolute,
color=bearColor,
textcolor=textColor
)
//------------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Hidden Bearish
// Osc: Higher High
oscHH = osc > ta.valuewhen(phFound, osc , 1) and _inRange(phFound )
// Price: Lower High
priceLH = high < ta.valuewhen(phFound, high , 1)
hiddenBearCond = plotHiddenBear and priceLH and oscHH and phFound
plot(
phFound ? osc : na,
offset=-lbR,
title="Hidden Bearish",
linewidth=1,
color=(hiddenBearCond ? hiddenBearColor : noneColor)
)
plotshape(
hiddenBearCond ? osc : na,
offset=-lbR,
title="Hidden Bearish Label",
text=" EDM ",
style=shape.labeldown,
location=location.absolute,
color=bearColor,
textcolor=textColor
)






















