Pivot Point Trend LineThis Indicator simply draw lines between high pivot points and low points.
in the code by default its used tradingview default ta.pivothigh and ta.pivotlow function to get the high and low points.
it will generate recent 4 lines of high and low pivot points.
you can change the no of days for both highs and lows pivot points.
this script is not generating any buy or sell signals its just autodraw and connect 2 pivot points. so you dont have to do it manually.
Cerca negli script per "TRENDLINES"
Donchian Channels [Gu5]█ OVERVIEW
I changed the design of the classic indicator "Donchian Channels", for easy reading.
█ CONCEPTS
Donchian Channels is an indicator made up of upper and lower bands around a mid-band or Basis.
The upper band marks the highest price of a security for N periods, while the lower band marks the lowest price of a security for N periods. The area between the upper and lower bands.
In this version, when there are new Higher High (HH), the trend is Bullish and the channel is painted green.
When there are new Lower Low (LL), the trend is Bearish and the channel is painted Red
█ OTHER SECTIONS
A plus in this script: When there are no new highs or new lows, there is no certain trend
The channel is painted yellow
www.tradingview.com
• HOW TO USE
Menu "Display"
• '■ Basis On/Off': Shows the midline Basis
• '■ Alert On/Off': Shows alerts labels
• '■ Fill On/Off': Paint the entire channel the color of the trend
• '■ Bar Color On/Off': Paint the candle the color of the trend
• '■ Close Alert On/Off': Shows alerts end of trend
• NOTES:
This code was written using the recommendations from the Pine Script™ User Manual's Style Guide
• RAMBLINGS:
You can use the "Basis" line as Trailing Stop.
• THANKS:
Donchian Channels developed by Richard Donchian
and many MANY thanks to @PineCoders
Faytterro Market Structerethis indicator creates the market structure with a little delay but perfectly. each zigzag is always drawn from highest to lowest. It also signals when the market structure is broken. signals fade over time.
The table above shows the percentage distance of the price from the last high and the last low.
zigzags are painted green when making higher peaks, while lower peaks are considered downtrends and are painted red. In fact, the indicator is quite simple to understand and use.
"length" is used to change the frequency of the signal.
"go to past" is used to see historical data.
Please review the examples:
HIT Trend & CrossoverThis indicator displays the trend of a declining stock using two yellow trendlines, and when a trend reversal occurs, it marks the buy price with a green trendline and the stop-loss price with a red trendline.
Investors can use these four trendlines as a reference to generate their own profits.
Red-E Market StructureRed-E Market Structure
📊 Overview
Red-E Market Structure is a comprehensive technical analysis tool that combines automated pivot detection, market structure analysis, volume delta tracking, and intelligent buy/sell signals into one powerful indicator. This script was created with the community in mind - we don't believe in gatekeeping tools that help traders succeed together.
🎯 What This Indicator Does
1. Intelligent Candle Coloring System
Royal Blue Candles: Strong bullish signals with high conviction
Baby Blue Candles: Moderate bullish signals for cautious entries
White Candles: Neutral market conditions
Orange Candles: Moderate bearish signals indicating potential weakness
Red Candles: Strong bearish signals with high conviction
2. Automated Pivot Point Detection
Automatically identifies and marks significant pivot highs and lows on your chart, helping you recognize key reversal zones and support/resistance levels without manual drawing.
3. Market Structure Analysis
Tracks and labels critical market structure patterns:
Higher Highs (HH): Bullish trend continuation
Higher Lows (HL): Bullish trend confirmation
Lower Highs (LH): Bearish trend formation
Lower Lows (LL): Bearish trend continuation
4. Automated Trendline Drawing
Connects pivot points with color-coded dashed trendlines (green for bullish, red for bearish), helping visualize trend direction and potential breakout zones.
5. Dynamic Buy/Sell Signals
Generates clear entry signals based on multiple factors including RSI, price vs moving average, and momentum analysis:
"STRONG BUY" labels for high-conviction long entries
"BUY" labels for moderate bullish opportunities
"SELL" labels for moderate bearish signals
"STRONG SELL" labels for high-conviction short entries
6. Real-Time Dashboard
A comprehensive dashboard displays:
Current signal status (Buy/Sell/Neutral)
Active market structure pattern
RSI value with color-coded zones
Volume Delta (cumulative buying vs selling pressure)
Bullish Dominance percentage
Bearish Dominance percentage
Price position relative to moving average
🔧 How to Use
Installation
Copy the Pine Script code
Open TradingView and navigate to the Pine Editor
Paste the code and click "Add to Chart"
Basic Setup
For Swing Trading:
Pivot Length: 7-10
RSI Length: 14
MA Length: 50
For Day Trading:
Pivot Length: 3-5
RSI Length: 14
MA Length: 20
For Scalping:
Pivot Length: 2-3
RSI Length: 7
MA Length: 9
Reading the Signals
Entry Signals:
Look for STRONG BUY labels combined with royal blue candles and Higher Lows for long entries
Look for STRONG SELL labels combined with red candles and Lower Highs for short entries
Confirm entries when volume dominance aligns with your direction (>55%)
Trend Confirmation:
Use the market structure labels to confirm trend direction
Higher Highs + Higher Lows = Uptrend intact
Lower Highs + Lower Lows = Downtrend intact
Exit Signals:
Exit longs when you see Lower Highs forming or orange/red candles appearing
Exit shorts when you see Higher Lows forming or blue candles appearing
Watch for trendline breaks as potential reversal signals
Volume Analysis:
Volume Delta above zero = Net buying pressure
Volume Delta below zero = Net selling pressure
Bullish Dominance >55% = Strong buying interest
Bearish Dominance >55% = Strong selling pressure
Dashboard Interpretation
RSI >70: Overbought - watch for reversals
RSI <30: Oversold - potential bounce zone
Price vs MA: Shows strength relative to trend (positive = above MA, negative = below MA)
💡 Why This Indicator Is Original
Red-E Market Structure is unique because it synthesizes multiple advanced concepts into a single, cohesive system:
Multi-Factor Signal Generation: Unlike single-indicator systems, this combines RSI, moving averages, volume analysis, and market structure into weighted signals
Adaptive Candle Coloring: The five-tier color system provides instant visual feedback on market conditions
Integrated Volume Delta: Real-time cumulative volume tracking shows institutional pressure
Automated Market Structure: Removes subjectivity by automatically identifying and labeling swing points
Comprehensive Dashboard: All critical metrics in one place for faster decision-making
🤝 Our Philosophy
We believe in empowering the trading community, not gatekeeping valuable tools. This indicator is shared freely because we all win when we share knowledge. Trading is challenging enough without artificial barriers to information and tools.
If this indicator helps your trading, pay it forward by helping other traders in your community. Success is more meaningful when it's shared.
⚙️ Customization Options
All settings are adjustable in the indicator settings panel:
Pivot Length: Sensitivity of pivot detection
RSI Parameters: Overbought/oversold levels
MA Length: Trend reference period
Dashboard Position: Top/Bottom, Left/Right placement
Toggle Features: Show/hide pivots, trendlines, or dashboard
⚠️ Disclaimer
This indicator is a technical analysis tool designed to assist in market analysis. It is not financial advice and should not be used as the sole basis for trading decisions. Always:
Use proper risk management
Combine with your own analysis
Practice on a demo account first
Never risk more than you can afford to lose
Consider multiple timeframes and confirmations
📈 Best Practices
Use Multiple Timeframes: Confirm signals on higher timeframes
Wait for Confirmation: Don't chase - wait for the signal and candle color to align
Respect Risk Management: Use stop losses below pivot lows (long) or above pivot highs (short)
Context Matters: Consider overall market conditions and major support/resistance zones
Volume Confirms: Stronger signals when volume dominance aligns with direction
🔄 Updates and Support
This script is provided as-is for the trading community. Feel free to modify and adapt it to your trading style. Share improvements with the community to help everyone succeed!
Remember: No indicator is perfect. This tool is designed to give you an edge, but successful trading requires discipline, risk management, and continuous learning. Trade responsibly and may your risk be ever in your favor! 📊✨
Kyle凯尔ATR精控引擎2.0What this indicator does
Blends Heikin Ashi smoothing with a Supertrend-style engine and an EMA filter to generate directional flips (Buy/Sell).
Auto-draws Supply/Demand zones with POI (point of interest) and marks BOS (Break of Structure).
Prints ATR-based Entry, Stop Loss, and TP1/TP2/TP3 levels; includes alerts.
Shows two dashboards: trend & momentum panel (top-right) and liquidity snapshot (bottom-right).
Adds auto trendlines and multi-timeframe horizontal S/R for context.
Quick start
Add the indicator to any symbol/timeframe.
Act on a fresh flip:
Long when direction flips Up and price is above EMA.
Short when direction flips Down and price is below EMA.
Look for confluence: reaction at Demand/Supply, BOS, trendline break, horizontal S/R, ADX > 20, supportive RSI and volume.
Manage risk with the ATR targets. Scale at TP1/TP2, let TP3 run (targets can “roll” after TP3 to rid trends).
Set alerts once per bar close for reliability.
How signals are formed
Heikin Ashi reduces noise by averaging price; ATR bands around HA price form two rails.
Direction flips when HA price crosses the opposite rail; EMA filter blocks counter-trend flips.
Buy/Sell signals are only valid on the bar close.
Supply/Demand, POI & BOS
Swing pivots create Supply (red) above and Demand (green) below; each zone shows a POI mdline.
When price breaks a zone boundary, the script stamps BOS at the midline and retires the old zone.
ATR risk targets
On a fresh signal, the tool snapshots Entry, then computes SL and TP1/2/3 as ATR multiples.
When TP3 hits, the module rolls targets from the new price to help ride sustained trends.
Optional on-chart lines + labels show Entry/SL/TPs.
Dashboards (how to read)
Top-right panel:
Direction (Up/Down/Neutral)
Momentum (close vs close 10 bars ago)
RSI(2) smoothed by 7: oversold/overbought cues + value
Volume bias: OBV minus its EMA (>0 = bullish)
ADX: >20 suggests stronger trend conditions
Multi-TF direction: 1m/5m/15m/1h/4h/D; more agreement = stronger setups
Bottom-right panel (“Liquidity”):
HA bias & intensity %, relative volume vs 20-SMA, and ATR.
Overlays
Trendlines auto-connect short/long window extremes; alerts on breaks.
Multi-TF S/R draws recent pivot highs/lows across selected TFs with de-overlapped labels.
Inputs to tune (common)
ATR Period / Multiplier: higher = smoother, fewer flips.
EMA Period: higher = stricter trend filter.
Supply/Demand: pivot sensitivity (swing_length), zone depth (box_width), number of zones to keep.
Risk/Targets: slMultiplier, tp1/2/3Multiplier (in ATRs), line/label toggles, colors.
Dashboards/Overlays: enable, position, size, S/R TFs, label spacing.
Suggested starting points (XAUUSD, intraday)
ATR(14), ATR Mult 1.3–1.6, EMA 9–21.
Risk: SL = 1.0–1.2 ATR; TPs at 1/2/3 ATR.
S/D: swing_length 8–12, box_width ~2–3.
Adjust per instrument and timeframe.
Example playbooks
Trend continuation: Fresh Buy (Up + above EMA) + pullback into Demand or near the midline; ADX > 20 preferred; scale at TP1/TP2, let TP3 run.
BOS retest: After BOS, trade the first retest into the broken area/POI in alignment with higher-TF direction; confirm with volume bias.
Breakout: Combine trendline break + Buy/Sell flip + S/R breach. Avoid low-liquidity hours.
Alerts included
Buy signal / Sell signal
Trendline break (Up/Down)
TP1/TP2/TP3 reached
Use “Once per bar close”.
Dinkan Price Action Pro | Pure Price Action Toolkit🔸 Overview
Dinkan Price Action Pro is a pure price-action research toolkit that automatically detects and visualizes Order Blocks (OB), Fair Value Gaps (FVG), merged-candle hidden structures, liquidity zones (including HTF bias liquidity), and trendline & chart-pattern liquidity.
This indicator helps traders align with the Higher Time Frame (HTF) bias — the direction of the dominant institutional wave — and uncover hidden candlestick structures that normal timeframe charts never show.
⚙️ Core Features
✅ Automatic Order Block detection (bullish & bearish)
✅ Fair Value Gaps with real-time fill tracking
✅ Merged-Candle Engine — reveals hidden structures between standard timeframes
✅ Liquidity Zones — equal highs/lows, trendline liquidity & HTF liquidity pools
✅ HTF Bias Engine — detect directional bias across multiple timeframes
✅ Auto Trendlines & Chart Pattern Liquidity
🔍 How It Works (Step by Step)
🕯️ A. Merged Candle Engine (Hidden Structure)
1️⃣ Choose how many candles to merge (e.g., 3–5).
2️⃣ The script groups candles backward from the current bar in continuous sets.
3️⃣ Each merged candle forms using:
• Open = first candle’s open • Close = last candle’s close
• High = highest high • Low = lowest low
4️⃣ These new candles expose “hidden” structures between fixed timeframes — revealing true base-impulse patterns missed by normal charts.
🟩 B. Order Block Detection
Detects consolidation (base) followed by strong impulse.
Marks demand (green) and supply (red) zones automatically.
Strength calculated using impulse range (and volume, if available).
Older, mitigated OBs can be hidden for clarity.
🟦 C. Fair Value Gaps (FVG)
Automatically detects imbalances between consecutive candles.
Unfilled FVGs are highlighted; once filled, zones fade or gray out.
Works dynamically across merged and standard candles.
🟧 D. Liquidity Zones
Finds equal highs/lows, wick clusters, and structural liquidity.
Trendline liquidity and chart-pattern liquidity detected in real time.
Projects HTF liquidity zones from higher charts down to current timeframe.
🔺 E. HTF Bias Engine
Analyzes higher and medium timeframes (HTF/MTF) using CISD-style confirmation.
Bias auto-adjusts or can be manually selected.
🧭 Purpose: Identify the dominant institutional flow and trade in its direction.
⏰ Timeframe Alignment
Recommended structure:
HTF: 4H or 1D
MTF: 1H or 30M
LTF: 15M or 5M
Users may let the script auto-adjust or manually configure each timeframe combination.
📘 Inputs & Settings
🔹 OB sensitivity (Low / Medium / High)
🔹 Volume weighting toggle
🔹 HTF & MTF selection (Auto / Manual)
🔹 Multi-symbol mode
🔹 Visual toggles (OB, FVG, trendlines, merged candles, bias labels)
🔹 Alert toggles (zone touch, bias flip, hidden structure detection)
📊 How to Use — Workflow Example
1️⃣ Load the indicator on your chart.
2️⃣ Check the HTF Bias direction — trade only in that direction.
3️⃣ Identify nearby Order Blocks or FVGs inside HTF liquidity areas.
4️⃣ Watch the Merged Candle View to confirm hidden structures (base + impulse).
5️⃣ Wait for LTF confirmation (e.g., small structure break, wick rejection).
6️⃣ Place stop beyond the opposite OB edge; target next liquidity cluster.
🎯 This workflow aligns your lower-timeframe trades with the dominant higher-timeframe flow.
🧱 Repainting & Stability
Completed OBs and FVGs remain static — they do not repaint.
Real-time zones during candle formation can update until candle closes (standard behavior).
Merged candles are recalculated each bar; once a group closes, it remains fixed historically.
⚠️ Limitations
This is not a buy/sell signal generator.
Volume-weighted features require volume data.
Use responsible risk management and independent confirmation methods.
🔒 Invite-Only / Locked Code
The script is published as invite-only to protect proprietary implementations of:
The merged-candle engine
Liquidity and bias-detection heuristics
Invite-only publishing complies with TradingView rules.
All logic, purpose, and usage are fully described here for transparency.
🧩 Originality & Usefulness
This script is an original integrated system, not a simple mashup.
Each module is interconnected to provide a unified analytical process:
The Merged Candle Engine creates hybrid bars that expose hidden base–impulse patterns.
These merged bars feed into the Order Block and Fair Value Gap logic, refining zone accuracy.
The Liquidity Detector references those zones and merged bars to locate valid structural pools.
Finally, the HTF Bias Engine confirms directional context across multiple pairs and timeframes.
Together, these elements form a dynamic framework that interprets institutional footprints and structure flow — something no single indicator can achieve individually.
The combination produces new analytical value: a precise, adaptive HTF bias alignment and structure-based liquidity map in one visual system.
📜 Disclaimer
This tool is for educational and analytical use only.
It does not constitute financial advice.
Trading involves risk — always perform independent analysis and practice sound risk management.
Past performance does not guarantee future results.
Trendline Breakout Strategy [KedArc Quant] Description
A single, rule-based system that builds two trendlines from confirmed swing pivots and trades their breakouts, with optional retest, trend-regime gates (EMA / HTF EMA), and ATR-based risk. All parts serve one decision flow: structure → breakout → gated entry → managed risk.
What it does (for traders)
Draws Up line (teal) through the last two Higher Lows and Down line (red) through the last two Lower Highs, then extends them forward.
Long when price breaks above red; Short when price breaks below teal.
Optional Retest entry: after a break, wait for a pullback toward the broken line within an ATR-scaled buffer.
Uses ATR stop and R-multiple target so risk is consistent across symbols/timeframes.
Labels HL1/HL2/LH1/LH2 so non-coders can verify which pivots built each line.
Why these components are combined
Pure breakout systems on trendlines suffer from three practical issues:
False breaks in chop → solved by trend-regime gates (EMA / HTF EMA) that only allow trades aligned with the prevailing trend.
Uneven volatility across markets/timeframes → solved by ATR-based stop/target, normalizing distance so R-multiples are comparable.
First break whipsaws near wedge apices → mitigated by the optional retest rule that demands a pullback/hold before entry.
These modules are not separate indicators with their own signals. They are support roles inside one method.
The pivot engine defines structure, the breakout detector defines signal, the regime gates decide if we’re allowed to take that signal, and the ATR module sizes risk.
Together they make the trendline breakout usable, testable, and explainable.
How it works (mechanism; each component explained)
1) Pivot engine (structure, non-repainting)
Swings are confirmed with ta.pivotlow/high(L, R). A pivot only exists after R bars (no look-ahead), so once plotted, the line built from those pivots will not repaint.
2) Trendline builder (geometry)
Teal line updates when two consecutive pivot lows satisfy HL2.price > HL1.price (and HL2 occurs after HL1).
Red line updates when two consecutive pivot highs satisfy LH2.price < LH1.price.
Lines are extended right and their current value is read every bar via line.get_price().
3) Breakout detector (signal)
On every bar, compute:
crossover(close, redLine) ⇒ Long breakout
crossunder(close, tealLine) ⇒ Short breakdown
4) Regime gates (trend filters, not separate signals)
EMA gate: allow longs only if close > EMA(len), shorts only if close < EMA(len).
HTF EMA gate (optional): same rule on a higher timeframe to avoid fighting the larger trend.
These do not create entries; they simply permit or block the breakout signal.
5) Retest module (optional confirmation)
After a breakout, record the line price. A valid retest occurs if price pulls back within an ATR-scaled buffer toward that broken line and then closes back in the breakout direction.
This reduces first-tick fakeouts.
6) Risk module (position exit)
Initial stop = ATR(len) × atrMult from entry.
Target = tpR × (ATR × atrMult) (e.g., 2R).
This keeps results consistent across instruments/timeframes.
Entries & exits
Long entry
Base: close breaks above red and passes EMA/HTF gates.
Retest (if enabled): after the break, price pulls back near the broken red line (within the ATR buffer) and holds; then enter.
Short entry
Mirror logic with teal (break below & gates), optionally with a retest.
Exit
strategy.exit places ATR stop & R-multiple target automatically.
Optional “flip”: close if the opposite base signal triggers.
How to use it (step-by-step)
Timeframe: 1–15m for intraday, 1–4h for swing.
Start defaults: Pivot L/R = 5, EMA len = 200, ATR len = 14, ATR mult = 2, TP = 2R, Retest = ON.
Tune sensitivity:
Faster lines (more trades): set L/R = 3–4.
Fewer counter-trend trades: enable HTF EMA (e.g., 60-min or Daily).
Visual audit: labels HL1/HL2 & LH1/LH2 show which pivots built each line—verify by eye.
Alerts: use Long breakout, Short breakdown, and Retest alerts to automate.
Originality (why it merits publication)
Trades the visualization: many “auto-trendline” tools only draw lines; this one turns them into testable, alertable rules.
Integrated design: each component has a defined role in the same pipeline—no unrelated indicators bolted together.
Transparent & non-repainting: pivot confirmation removes look-ahead; labels let non-coders understand the setup that produced each signal.
Notes & limitations
Lines update only after pivot confirmation; that lag is intentional to avoid repainting.
Breakouts near an apex can whipsaw; prefer Retest and/or HTF gate in choppy regimes.
Backtests are idealized; forward-test and size risk appropriately.
⚠️ 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.
Trend FriendTrend Friend — What it is and how to use it
I built Trend Friend to stop redrawing the same trendlines all day. It automatically connects confirmed swing points (fractals) and keeps the most relevant lines in front of you. The goal: give you clean, actionable structure without the guesswork.
What it does (in plain English)
Finds swing highs/lows using a Fractal Period you choose.
Draws auto-trendlines between the two most recent confirmed highs and the two most recent confirmed lows.
Colours by intent:
Lines drawn from highs (potential resistance / bearish) = Red
Lines drawn from lows (potential support / bullish) = Green
Keeps the chart tidy: The newest lines are styled as “recent,” older lines are dimmed as “historical,” and it prunes anything beyond your chosen limit.
Optional crosses & alerts: You can highlight when price closes across the most recent line and set alerts for new lines formed and upper/lower line crosses.
Structure labels: It tags HH, LH, HL, LL at the swing points, so you can quickly read trend/rotation.
How it works (under the hood)
A “fractal” here is a confirmed pivot: the highest high (or lowest low) with n bars on each side. That means pivots only confirm after n bars, so signals are cleaner and less noisy.
When a new pivot prints, the script connects it to the prior pivot of the same type (high→high, low→low). That gives you one “bearish” line from highs and one “bullish” line from lows.
The newest line is marked as recent (brighter), and the previous recent line becomes historical (dimmed). You can keep as many pairs as you want, but I usually keep it tight.
Inputs you’ll actually use
Fractal Period (n): this is the big one. It controls how swingy/strict the pivots are.
Lower n → more swings, more lines (faster, noisier)
Higher n → fewer swings, cleaner lines (slower, swing-trade friendly)
Max pair of lines: how many pairs (up+down) to keep on the chart. 1–3 is a sweet spot.
Extend: extend lines Right (my default) or Both ways if you like the context.
Line widths & colours: recent vs. historical are separate so you can make the active lines pop.
Show crosses: toggle the X markers when price crosses a line. I turn this on when I’m actively hunting breakouts/retests.
Reading the chart
Red lines (from highs): I treat these as potential resistance. A clean break + hold above a red line often flips me from “fade” to “follow.”
Green lines (from lows): Potential support. Same idea in reverse: break + hold below and I stop buying dips until I see structure reclaim.
HH / LH / HL / LL dots: quick read on structure.
HH/HL bias = uptrend continuation potential
LH/LL bias = downtrend continuation potential
Mixed prints = rotation/chop—tighten risk or wait for clarity.
My H1 guidance (fine-tuning Fractal Period)
If you’re mainly on H1 (my use case), tune like this:
Fast / aggressive: n = 6–8 (lots of signals, good for momentum days; more chop risk)
Balanced (recommended): n = 9–12 (keeps lines meaningful but responsive)
Slow / swing focus: n = 13–21 (filters noise; better for trend days and higher-TF confluence)
Rule of thumb: if you’re getting too many touches and whipsaws, increase n. If you’re late to obvious breaks, decrease n.
How I trade it (example workflow)
Pick your n for the session (H1: start at 9–12).
Mark the recent red & green lines. That’s your immediate structure.
Look for interaction:
Rejections from a line = fade potential back into the range.
Break + close across a line = watch the retest for continuation.
Confirm with context: session bias, HTF structure, and your own tools (VWAP, RSI, volume, FVG/OB, etc.).
Plan the trade: enter on retest or reclaim, stop beyond the line/last swing, target the opposite side or next structure.
Alerts (set and forget)
“New trendline formed” — fires when a new high/low pivot confirms and a fresh line is drawn.
“Upper/lower trendline crossed” — fires when price crosses the most recent red/green line.
Use these to track structure shifts without staring at the screen.
Good to know (honest limitations)
Confirmation lag: pivots need n bars on both sides, so signals arrive after the swing confirms. That’s by design—less noise, fewer fake lines.
Lines update as structure evolves: when a new pivot forms, the previous “recent” line becomes “historical,” and older ones can be removed based on your max setting.
Not an auto trendline crystal ball: it won’t predict which line holds or breaks—it just keeps the most relevant structure clean and up to date.
Final notes
Works on any timeframe; I built it with H1 in mind and scale to H4/D1 by increasing n.
Pairs nicely with session tools and VWAP for intraday, or with supply/demand / FVGs for swing planning.
Risk first: lines are structure, not guarantees. Manage position size and stops as usual.
Not financial advice. Trade your plan. Stay nimble.
Supp_Ress_V1This indicator automatically plots support and resistance levels using confirmed pivot highs and lows, then manages them smartly by merging nearby levels, extending them, and removing them once price breaks through.
It also draws trendlines by connecting valid higher-lows (uptrend) or lower-highs (downtrend), ensuring they slope correctly and have enough spacing between pivots.
In short: it gives you a clean, trader-like map of the most relevant S/R zones and trendlines, updating dynamically as price action unfolds.
CleanBreak Lines (Break + First Retest)CleanBreak lines draws one robust support line (green) from swing lows and one robust resistance line (red) from swing highs, then optionally signals a confirmed break and the first clean retest back to that line. Lines are scored with a transparent W-Score (0–100) so traders can judge quality at a glance. The script is non-repainting and uses only confirmed bar data.
What it does
Auto-builds two trendlines that aim to represent meaningful support and resistance.
Uses a median-based slope so outliers and single spikes do not distort the line.
Computes a W-Score per line from three things: touches, span (how long it held), and respect (staying on the correct side).
Optionally triggers a single, tightly-gated signal on Break + First Retest.
How it works (plain English)
Detect recent swing highs and swing lows.
Fit one line through highs and one through lows using a robust, median-style slope estimate.
Score each line: more clean touches and longer span raise the W-Score; frequent violations lower it.
A break requires a candle close beyond the line by a small ATR margin.
A first retest requires price to come back to the line within a limited number of bars and hold on close.
A single arrow may print on that confirmed retest, with optional alerts.
What it is not
Not a prediction model and not a promises-of-profit tool.
Not a multi-signal spammer: by design it aims to allow one retest entry per break.
Not a regression channel or machine-learning system.
How to use
At a glance: treat the green line as candidate support and the red line as candidate resistance.
Conservative approach: wait for a break on close and then the first retest to hold; use the arrow as a prompt, not a command.
Context-only mode: hide arrows in Style if you want the lines and W-Score only.
Inputs (brief)
Core: Swing Length, Max Pivots, Min Touches, Min Span Bars.
Scoring: Touches Max (cap), Weights for touches vs span, Min W-Score to arm.
Break and Retest: Break Margin x ATR, Retest Tolerance x ATR, Retest Window (bars).
Visuals: Show Labels, Show Table, Line Width, Fade When Refit.
Recommended presets
Cleaner, fewer signals: Min Touches 4–5, Min Span Bars 100–150, Min W-Score 70–80, Break Margin 0.40–0.60 ATR, Retest Tolerance 0.10–0.15 ATR, Retest Window 8–12 bars.
Lines-only: keep defaults and uncheck the two plotshapes in Style.
Alerts
CB Long Retest: break above the red line and first retest holds.
CB Short Retest: break below the green line and first retest holds.
Use “Once per bar close” for consistency.
On-chart table (if enabled)
RES / SUP: W-Score and distance from price in ATR terms.
Status: “Waiting Long RT”, “Waiting Short RT”, or “Idle”.
Thresholds: MinScore and Retest bars for quick context.
Timeframes
Works well on 1h to 1D. On very low timeframes, raise Break Margin x ATR to reduce whipsaw effects. On higher timeframes, increase Min Touches and Min Span Bars.
Non-repainting policy
All logic uses confirmed pivots and confirmed bar closes.
Breaks and retests are validated on close; alerts reference only confirmed conditions.
No lookahead in any request.security call.
Original implementation focused on a median-based robust slope for auto trendlines, plus a transparent W-Score and a single retest gate.
Disclosure
This script is for education and charting. It does not guarantee outcomes, and past behavior does not imply future results. Always validate on historical data and practice risk management.
Range Trends Enhanced (eleven11)This indicator automatically draws your Range Trend lines based upon your timeframe. When you select a timeframe, in the options, those lines will be locked in, whenever you switch timeframes on the chart. This allows you to "lock in" a timeframe's trendlines and then view it on different timeframes. But if you want to view the current trendlines for a timeframe then you need to select that "lockdown" timeframe in the settings. The original code was created by eleven11
📱 Mobile EMA + V2L5 (edegrano)User Manual: Mobile EMA + V2 (edegrano)
Overview
This TradingView indicator combines EMA bias analysis and multi-timeframe linear regression trendlines with key crossover signals, displayed both on the chart and summarized in a colour-coded table for quick decision-making on mobile devices or desktops.
Inputs
Input Name Description Default
Custom EMA Timeframe Timeframe used to calculate EMA 50, 100, 200 "1" (1m)
Show EMAs on Chart Toggle to plot EMAs (50-blue, 100-black, 200-red) true
Linear Regression Length Period length for linear regression trendlines 20
Show EMA 50 > EMA 200 Bias Show EMA bias row in the table (Bullish/Bearish) true
Show Trendline Slope Bias Show trendline slope bias row in the table true
Price Distance % from Cross Percentage distance used to calculate above/below cross prices in table 2.0
What It Shows
On Chart:
EMA 50 (blue), EMA 100 (black), EMA 200 (red) lines
Vertical lines at EMA 50/200 crossover bars (blue for bullish, red for bearish)
Labels “Bull Cross” or “Bear Cross” on crossover bars
Signal dots (up to 3 consecutive strong buy or sell signals)
Table (bottom-left corner):
Row Description
EMA 50 > EMA 200 Bullish if EMA 50 is above EMA 200, Bearish otherwise (colored green/red text)
Trendline slope Bullish if all 1m, 3m, 5m regression slopes are up, Bearish if all down, Neutral otherwise (green/red/gray text)
Last EMA Cross Price Price where EMA 50 and EMA 200 last crossed (light blue text)
+% Above Cross Price percentage above last EMA cross price (dark orange text)
-% Below Cross Price percentage below last EMA cross price (red text)
Final Suggestion Overall signal: “Strong Buy 💎”, “Strong Sell 💎”, or “Mixed / Neutral” with green/red/gray background
How To Use
Set your preferred timeframe for EMA calculations using the Custom EMA Timeframe input. The default is 1 minute.
Enable or disable EMAs and table rows as you prefer with toggles.
Watch the table for quick bias and trend signals with color-coded text for easy interpretation.
Use the Last EMA Cross Price and the above/below percentage price points to identify key levels for entries, stops, or take profits.
Monitor the chart for EMA crossover vertical lines and labels to confirm signals visually.
Strong Buy or Sell dots indicate good entry opportunities — limited to 3 per consecutive trend.
Tips
Adjust the Price Distance % input to increase/decrease sensitivity of above/below price levels.
Combine this indicator with volume, price action, or other tools for best results.
Use on mobile or desktop with the compact table to stay informed without clutter.
📱 Mobile EMA + Trendline Bias (edegrano)📱 Mobile EMA + Trendline Bias (edegrano) — User Manual
What It Does
This indicator helps you spot strong bullish or bearish trends by combining:
EMA Bias: Using the relationship between EMA 50 and EMA 200 on your chosen timeframe.
Trendline Slope Bias: Using linear regression trendlines on fixed 1-minute, 3-minute, and 5-minute charts.
Signal Dots: Visual buy/sell signals limited to the first 3 occurrences after the last opposite signal to avoid noise.
Summary Table: Shows the current trend bias and final suggestion.
EMA Plots: Shows EMA 50, EMA 100, and EMA 200 lines on your chart.
Tag Label: Displays a small signature tag “📱 edegrano Mobile” on the chart.
Inputs
Input Name Description Default Notes
Custom EMA Timeframe (userTF) Timeframe used to calculate EMAs "1" (1 min) Choose your preferred timeframe (e.g., 1, 3, 5, 15, 60 minutes, etc.)
Show EMAs on Chart (showEMA) Toggle EMA lines visibility true Show or hide EMA 50, 100, and 200 lines
Linear Regression Length (regLen) Length of bars used in regression 20 Adjusts sensitivity of regression trendlines (lower = more responsive)
Show EMA Bias Row (showRowEMA50) Show/hide EMA bias row in the table true Display the EMA 50 > EMA 200 bias status in table
Show Trendline Bias Row (showRowTrend) Show/hide trendline slope row in table true Display the trendline slope bias status in table
How to Use
Set Your Timeframe:
Choose the timeframe for EMA calculations (userTF) depending on your trading style.
Scalpers might use 1-5 minute charts.
Day traders might choose 5-30 minutes.
Swing traders could go 1 hour or more.
Watch the EMA Lines:
EMA 50 (blue), EMA 100 (black), and EMA 200 (red) are plotted on your chart.
These lines help you visualize trend direction and momentum.
Understand the Bias Conditions:
EMA Bias:
Bullish: EMA 50 > EMA 200
Bearish: EMA 50 < EMA 200
Trendline Slope Bias:
Calculated on fixed 1m, 3m, and 5m charts.
Bullish if slope of all 3 regression lines is up (current value > previous).
Bearish if slope of all 3 regression lines is down.
Look for Signal Dots:
Green (lime) dots below bars: Strong Buy signals (first 3 occurrences only after last sell).
Red dots above bars: Strong Sell signals (first 3 occurrences only after last buy).
This limitation helps reduce noise from too many signals.
Check the Table (Bottom Left):
Shows EMA bias and trendline slope status.
Displays overall final suggestion:
Strong Buy 💎
Strong Sell 💎
Mixed / Neutral
Tag Label:
A small label "📱 edegrano Mobile" appears on the chart for easy identification.
Tips & Best Practices
Adjust Regression Length (regLen):
Lower values (e.g., 15-20) react faster but may generate false signals.
Higher values (30-50) smooth noise but react slower — better for longer-term trades.
Combine with Other Indicators:
Use volume, candlestick patterns, or support/resistance to confirm signals.
Don’t Trade Against the Signal:
Avoid entering buy trades during a “Strong Sell” phase and vice versa.
Monitor Multiple Timeframes:
Consider confirming trends on higher timeframes.
Parameter Suggestions by Trading Style
Style EMA Timeframe Regression Length (regLen)
Scalping 1 min 15 - 20
Day Trading 5 - 15 min 20 - 30
Swing Trading 1 hour or higher 30 - 50
Position Trading 4 hour, Daily, Weekly 50 - 100
📱 Mobile EMA + Trendline Bias (edegrano)📱 Mobile EMA + Trendline Bias (edegrano) — User Manual
Purpose
This indicator provides a simplified, mobile-friendly overview of trend bias using EMA and multi-timeframe regression trendline confluences, plus plots EMA lines and a small info table on the chart.
Inputs Explained
Input Name Description
Custom EMA Timeframe The timeframe on which the EMA 50 and EMA 200 calculations are based (e.g., 1, 3, 5 minutes). This lets you choose which timeframe to analyze EMA trend bias.
Show EMAs on Chart Toggle to show or hide EMA 50 (blue) and EMA 200 (red) lines on your chart.
Regression Length The length (number of bars) used for calculating the linear regression trendlines on fixed 1m, 3m, and 5m timeframes. Lower values make trendlines more reactive, higher values smooth out noise.
Show EMA 50 Bias Row Show or hide the EMA 50 vs EMA 200 bias row in the info table.
Show Trendline Slope Row Show or hide the multi-timeframe trendline slope bias row in the info table.
What It Shows
EMA Lines: EMA 50 (blue) and EMA 200 (red) based on your selected timeframe.
Trendline Slopes: Using linear regression on 1-minute, 3-minute, and 5-minute charts to gauge short-term trend direction.
Info Table (Bottom Left):
EMA 50 > EMA 200 status on your selected timeframe (Bullish/Bearish)
Trendline slope bias combining the 3 fixed timeframes (Bullish/Bearish/Neutral)
Final Suggestion showing overall bias:
Strong Buy 💎 if both EMA and trendline biases are bullish
Strong Sell 💎 if both are bearish
Mixed / Neutral otherwise
Tag on Chart Corner: Displays “📱 edegrano Mobile” label for quick identification.
How To Use
Set the Custom EMA Timeframe:
Choose a timeframe that fits your trading style (e.g., 1m for scalping, 5m for day trading).
Adjust Regression Length:
For faster signals, lower the regression length (e.g., 15).
For smoother, less noisy signals, increase it (e.g., 30 or higher).
Toggle EMA Lines Display:
Show or hide EMA lines based on your preference for chart clarity.
Use the Info Table:
Quickly glance at EMA and trendline bias across timeframes for confluence confirmation.
Interpret the Final Suggestion:
Follow “Strong Buy” or “Strong Sell” signals for potential entry points. If “Mixed / Neutral,” wait for stronger confirmation.
Suggested Parameters by Trading Style
Style EMA Timeframe Regression Length Notes
Scalping 1 min 15-20 Responsive, fast reaction to price
Day Trading 3-5 min 20-30 Balanced sensitivity
Swing Trading 15-30 min 30-50 Smoother trend detection
Position Trading 1 hr+ 50-100 Very smooth, low noise
Tips
Combine this indicator with volume or other indicators for stronger confirmation.
Use the EMA lines on chart visually to confirm trend direction.
The info table updates in real-time, making it easy for quick decisions on mobile.
Adjust inputs and observe how the final suggestion changes to tune for your asset and timeframe.
LiquidEdge Original1️⃣ Why Most Traders Miss Key Market Turning Points
Most traders (you) struggle to identify true market pivots THE REAL TOP and BOTTOMS where reversals begin.
❌ You enter too early or too late because price alone doesn’t give enough confirmation
❌ You follow price blindly, unaware of the volume pressure building underneath
❌ You get caught in sideways markets, not realizing they’re often accumulation or distribution zones
❌ You can’t tell if momentum is building or fading, which leads to low confidence and inconsistent results
👉 LiquidEdge helps solve this by tracking volume momentum through a modified MFI slope and scoring system. It highlights potential pivots with real context, so you can see where smart money might be entering or exiting before price makes it obvious.
2️⃣ What LiquidEdge Actually Does and How
LiquidEdge helps solve common trading problems by adding structure and clarity to volume analysis.
✅ It builds on the classic Money Flow Index (MFI), but instead of just showing overbought/oversold levels, it calculates the slope of MFI to track real-time changes in volume momentum
✅ Each setup is scored based on a combination of factors: divergence strength, trend alignment using EMA, and whether the signal occurs inside a liquidity zone
✅ Hidden accumulation or distribution is revealed when volume pressure increases or fades while price remains flat or moves slightly, a sign of smart money positioning
✅ Divergences are only flagged when they occur near pivot zones and align with overall trend conditions, helping reduce false signals
✅ Potential pivots are identified when multiple factors overlap such as a liquidity zone breach, volume slope shift, and valid divergence which often signals entry or exit points for institutional players
👉 The result is a structured interpretation of price and volume flow, helping traders read momentum shifts and potential reversals more clearly in both trending and ranging markets.
3️⃣ What Makes LiquidEdge Different
LiquidEdge is built on top of the classic Money Flow Index (MFI), but adds structure that transforms it from a basic momentum tool into a decision-support system.
Instead of simply showing highs and lows, it scores each potential setup based on:
✅ The steepness and direction of the MFI slope (used to measure volume pressure)
✅ Whether the setup aligns with the broader trend using an EMA filter (default: 200 EMA)
✅ Whether the signal appears inside predefined liquidity zones (MFI above 80 or below 20)
👉 This scoring system reduces noise and helps you focus only on high-probability setups.
👉 It also checks volume pressure across multiple timeframes using MFI slope on 5M, 15M, 1H, 4H, and Daily charts. This reveals whether short-term moves are backed by longer-term volume momentum.
Color changes in the line and histogram are not decorative they reflect real shifts in volume pressure. Every visual cue is linked to live market logic.
What Makes It Stand Out
👉 Setup Scoring That Makes Sense
Each setup is scored by combining:
Signal strength (MFI slope intensity and stability)
Trend direction (via customizable EMA)
Liquidity zone relevance (MFI range filtering)
This structured scoring means you spend less time second-guessing and more time reading clean signals.
👉 Flow That Follows Real Momentum
The slope of the MFI tracks whether volume pressure is rising or falling:
🟢 Green = increasing inflow (buying pressure)
🔴 Red = increasing outflow (selling pressure)
👉 Multi-Timeframe Volume Context
LiquidEdge calculates flow direction independently on each major timeframe. You’ll know if short-term setups are confirmed by higher timeframe volume or going against it.
👉 Smart Divergence Filtering
Unlike simple divergence tools that compare price highs/lows directly, LiquidEdge filters divergences based on:
Local pivot zones (defined by lookback periods)
Trend confirmation (to eliminate countertrend noise)
4️⃣ How LiquidEdge Works (Under the Hood)
LiquidEdge tracks directional momentum using the slope of the Money Flow Index (MFI) giving you a real-time read on buying and selling pressure.
When the slope rises, it means buyers are stepping in and volume is supporting the move.
When it falls, sellers are taking control and volume outflow is increasing.
This slope acts like a pressure gauge for the market, helping you spot when a trend has strength or when it's starting to fade.
💡 Quick Comparison
RSI = momentum from price
MFI = momentum from price + volume
LiquidEdge takes it one step further by calculating the rate of change (slope) in MFI. That’s where the pressure signal comes from not just value, but directional flow.
Core Calculations (Simplified)
Typical Price = (High + Low + Close) ÷ 3
Raw Money Flow = Typical Price × Volume
MFI = 100 −
MFI ranges from 0 to 100.
High = strong buying volume
Low = growing selling pressure
LiquidEdge then calculates the slope of this MFI over time to track volume momentum dynamically.
Divergence Engine
LiquidEdge detects divergence by comparing price pivots with the direction of MFI slope.
❌ If price makes a higher high but MFI slope turns down, it’s a bearish divergence
✅ If price makes a lower low but MFI slope rises, it’s a bullish divergence
Divergences are only confirmed when they occur:
Near local pivot zones (defined by configurable lookback windows)
And, optionally, in alignment with the broader trend using an EMA filter
This filtering helps reduce false positives and keeps you focused on clean setups.
Structured Confidence Scoring
Each signal is visually scored based on:
➡️ Whether a valid divergence is detected
➡️ Whether the signal occurs inside a liquidity zone (MFI > 80 or < 20)
➡️ Whether the setup aligns with the overall trend direction (EMA filter)
More confluence = higher confidence
The scoring system helps prioritize setups that meet multiple criteria, not just one.
Liquidity Zones
Above 80: Signals possible buying exhaustion 👉 risk of reversal
Below 20: Indicates potential selling exhaustion 👉 watch for a bounce
Zones are shaded directly on the chart to highlight pressure extremes in real time.
Price + Volume Fusion
LiquidEdge blends price action with volume pressure using MFI slope and histogram behavior. It doesn’t just show you where price is moving. it shows whether the move is backed by real volume.
This lets you see:
Whether volume is confirming or fading behind a move
If a reversal is building even before price confirms it
Visual Feedback That Speaks Clearly
🟢 Green slope = increasing buying pressure
🔴 Red slope = increasing selling pressure
5️⃣ When Price Is Flat but LiquidEdge Moves: Volume Tells the Truth
One of the most useful things LiquidEdge can do is reveal pressure shifts when price looks neutral.
If price is moving sideways but the MFI slope or histogram rises, it may suggest that buying pressure is quietly increasing possibly pointing to early accumulation.
If price stays flat while the volume slope or histogram drops, this could indicate distribution, where sellers are exiting without moving the market noticeably.
These changes don’t guarantee a breakout or breakdown, but they often precede key moves especially when combined with other confluences like trend alignment or liquidity zones.
👉 LiquidEdge helps spot these setups by measuring volume momentum shifts beneath price action.
It doesn’t predict the future, but it gives you additional context to evaluate what may be developing before it’s visible on price alone.
6️⃣ Multi-Timeframe Flow Table
LiquidEdge includes a real-time table that tracks volume pressure across multiple timeframes including 5-minute, 15-minute, 1-hour, 4-hour, and daily charts.
Each row reflects the direction of the MFI slope on that timeframe, indicating whether volume pressure is increasing (inflow) or decreasing (outflow).
🟢 A rising slope suggests that buying momentum is building
🔴 A falling slope suggests selling pressure may be increasing
👉 This lets traders quickly assess whether short-term setups are aligned with higher timeframe volume trends a useful layer of confirmation for both intraday and swing strategies.
Rather than flipping between charts, the table gives you a snapshot of flow strength across the board, helping you stay focused on opportunities that align with broader market pressure.
7️⃣ Timeframes & Assets
Where LiquidEdge Works Best:
✅ Crypto: Supports major coins and high-volume altcoins (BTC, ETH, Top 100)
✅ Stocks: Effective on large-cap and mid-cap equities with consistent volume
✅ Futures: Tested on instruments like NQ, MNQ, ES, and MES
✅ Any liquid market where volume data is reliable and stable
For best results, use LiquidEdge on assets with consistent trading volume. It’s not recommended for ultra-low volume crypto pairs or micro-cap stocks, where irregular volume can distort signals.
Recommended Timeframes:
👉 Intraday trading: Works well on 3-minute, 5-minute, 15-minute, and 1-hour charts
👉 Swing trading: Performs reliably on 4-hour, daily, and weekly charts
👉 Ultra short-term (1-minute or less): Not recommended due to high noise and low reliability
LiquidEdge adapts to various trading styles from scalping short-term momentum shifts to analyzing broader volume trends across swing and positional setups. The key is choosing assets and timeframes with reliable volume flow for the tool to work effectively.
8️⃣ Common Mistakes to Avoid When Using LiquidEdge
❌ Using It in Isolation
LiquidEdge offers valuable context, but it’s not designed to function as a standalone trading system. Always combine it with key tools such as trendlines, support/resistance zones, chart structure, or fundamental data. The more supporting evidence you have, the stronger your analysis becomes.
❌ Relying on a Single Indicator
No indicator, including LiquidEdge, can account for every market condition. It’s important to use it alongside other forms of confirmation to avoid making decisions based on limited data.
❌ Misinterpreting Divergences as Reversals
A divergence between price and volume pressure doesn't always signal the end of a trend. If the broader direction remains strong (based on EMAs or higher timeframe volume flow), a divergence could reflect temporary consolidation rather than reversal.
❌ Ignoring Trend Alignment and Confidence Scoring
LiquidEdge includes confidence scoring to help validate signals. Disregarding this structure can lead to reacting to weak or out-of-context divergences, especially in choppy or low-volume environments.
❌ Using It on Second-Based or Tick Charts
Very low timeframes introduce too much noise, which can distort volume slope and divergence signals. For intraday analysis, start with 3-minute charts or higher. For swing trading, use 4H and up for clearer, more reliable structure.
9️⃣ LiquidEdge Settings Overview
A quick breakdown of what you can customize in the indicator and how each option affects what you see:
➡️ LiquidEdge Length
Controls how sensitive the indicator is to changes in volume pressure (via MFI slope).
Shorter values = faster response, more frequent signals
Longer values = smoother output, less noise
👉 Default: 14
➡️ EMA Trend Filter
Determines overall trend direction based on EMA slope. Used to filter out signals that go against the broader move.
Helps reduce countertrend entries
Adjustable to suit your strategy
👉 Recommended: 200 EMA
➡️ Pivot Lookback (Left & Right)
Defines how many bars the system looks back and forward to identify swing highs/lows for divergence detection.
Narrow: more responsive but can be noisy
Wide: slower but more stable pivot zones
👉 Default: 5 left / 5 right
➡️ Histogram Toggle
Enables a visual histogram showing how volume pressure deviates from its recent average.
Useful for spotting shifts in flow intensity
👉 Optional for added visual detail
➡️ Liquidity Zones
Highlights potential exhaustion zones based on MFI value:
Above 80 = potential distribution (buying pressure peaking)
Below 20 = possible accumulation (selling pressure fading)
👉 Zones are fully customizable (color, opacity, background)
➡️ Custom Threshold Zones
Set your own upper/lower boundaries for liquidity extremes helpful when adapting to different markets or asset classes.
👉 Especially useful outside of crypto/forex
➡️ Show LiquidEdge Line
Toggle the main MFI slope line. When turned off, liquidity zones and levels also disappear.
👉 Use if you prefer to focus only on histogram/divergences
➡️ Style Settings
Customize line colors, histogram appearance, and background shading
👉 Helps tailor visuals to your chart layout
➡️ Simplified Mode
Removes all colors and replaces visuals with a clean, grayscale output.
👉 Ideal for minimalist or distraction-free charting
➡️ Signal Score Label
Displays the confidence score of the current setup, based on:
Divergence presence
Liquidity zone positioning
Trend alignment (EMA)
👉 Tooltip explains how the score is calculated
➡️ Divergence Labels
Shows “Bullish” or “Bearish” labels at divergence points.
Optional Filters based on trend if EMA filter is active
➡️ Multi-Timeframe Flow Table
Shows directional flow (based on MFI slope) across: 5M, 15M, 1H, 4H, 1D
Color-coded (faded green/red) for clarity
👉 Table position is customizable on your chart
➡️ Alerts
Get notified when any of these conditions are met:
✅ Bullish or bearish divergence detected
✅ Price enters high/low liquidity zones
✅ Signal score reaches a defined value
➡️ Visibility Settings
Control which timeframes display the LiquidEdge indicator
👉 Best used on 3-minute and above
⚠️ Not recommended on ultra-low or second-based charts due to noise
🔟 Q&A – What Traders Usually Ask
➡️ Can this help reduce bad trades?
To a degree, yes. LiquidEdge is built to highlight areas where price may react, based on volume pressure, liquidity zones, and divergence patterns. It can offer clarity in sideways or messy markets, helping traders avoid impulsive or poorly timed entries.
That said, it’s not predictive or guaranteed. It works best when used with broader context including structure, support/resistance, trend, and volume-based confluence.
👉 Reminder: LiquidEdge is not a signal tool. It’s a decision-support framework designed to help you assess potential shifts, not replace judgment or trading rules.
➡️ Is this just another flashy signal tool?
No. LiquidEdge doesn’t give buy/sell alerts. Instead, it visualizes volume shifts using MFI slope, divergence filtering, and trend-based scoring. It’s built to help you understand why price action may be changing not just react to a one-dimensional signal.
You’re seeing how volume pressure evolves across timeframes, which gives added context to what’s unfolding in the market.
➡️ How do I know this isn’t just another overhyped tool?
LiquidEdge is based on real trading logic: volume pressure (via MFI slope), price behavior, and divergence within trend and liquidity zones. It was developed and tested by traders, not packaged by marketers.
No performance is guaranteed. It’s designed to support your decisions not promise results.
➡️ Will this work with my trading style?
If you trade any market with volume crypto, stocks, or futures LiquidEdge can add value.
✔️ Scalpers: Best from 3-minute and up
✔️ Swing traders: Works well on 4H, Daily, Weekly
✔️ Investors: Weekly charts show pressure buildup over time
⚠️ Avoid ultra-low timeframes (under 1M) or illiquid markets, as noise and irregular data can reduce reliability.
➡️ Can I trust the signals?
These are not buy/sell signals. LiquidEdge offers confidence-weighted insights based on:
✔️ Valid divergence
✔️ Zone positioning (above 80 / below 20)
✔️ Optional trend alignment (via EMA)
Each setup is scored visually to reflect how much confluence exists. You can combine that information with structure, price action, or your existing tools to evaluate opportunities.
👉 Think of LiquidEdge as a decision filter not a trigger.
It’s meant to slow down impulsive trades and help you make more context-aware decisions.
1️⃣1️⃣ Limitations – Know When It’s Less Effective
LiquidEdge performs best in stable, high-volume markets where volume data is consistent and structure is visible.
It’s not recommended for:
❌ Low-volume tokens
❌ Micro-cap or penny stocks
❌ Newly listed assets with limited trading history
These types of markets often show inconsistent or erratic volume behavior, making it difficult for LiquidEdge to accurately assess pressure or identify reliable divergences.
⚠️ During major news events or sudden volatility spikes, volume and price behavior can become disconnected or extreme. This may distort MFI slope calculations and reduce the accuracy of divergence or confidence scoring.
LiquidEdge is built to read structured volume flow. When market conditions become highly erratic or unpredictable, it's best to:
Wait for structure to return
Use it alongside other filters for additional confirmation
This isn't a flaw it's simply the nature of tools that rely on consistency in price and volume data.
1️⃣2️⃣ Real Chart Examples – See It in Action
Now that you’ve seen how LiquidEdge works, here are real-world chart examples from various asset classes
including:
✅ Crypto
✅ Stocks
✅ Futures
✅ Commodities
These examples demonstrate how LiquidEdge behaves under different conditions, and how both the line (MFI slope) and histogram (volume deviation) can be used to interpret market flow.
In each walkthrough, you’ll see:
How the histogram can highlight potential momentum shifts
When the slope line provides stronger directional clarity
Examples of possible hidden accumulation or distribution (before price responds)
What to watch out for such as weak volume, false divergences, or conflicting flow signals
👉 These are real examples based on live market data not theoretical setups. They’re meant to help you recognize how LiquidEdge reacts across multiple styles and timeframes.
Let’s walk through each one and break down the logic step by step, so you can understand how to evaluate setups using structure, volume behavior, and context-driven confluence.
Example: Microsoft (MSFT) – Possible Hidden Accumulation
In this setup, price was moving lower within a short-term downtrend. However, LiquidEdge began showing signs of increasing inflow pressure a common characteristic of accumulation, where volume rises even as price declines.
This divergence suggested that buying interest may have been increasing behind the scenes, despite weak price action on the surface.
Step-by-step breakdown:
👉 Trend context – Price was clearly trending down at the time
👉 Volume divergence – Price made lower lows, but LiquidEdge slope was rising = possible bullish divergence
👉 Accumulation clue – The rising slope, despite falling price, pointed to volume inflow often seen during quiet accumulation
👉 Histogram support – Volume pressure (via the histogram) also increased, confirming the flow shift
👉 Anticipating reaction – When liquidity pressure rises ahead of price, it can signal potential reversal interest
In this case, price later moved sharply higher. While not guaranteed, setups like this illustrate how divergence + volume flow may help highlight early accumulation zones before price confirms the shift.
Same Setup – Focusing on the Histogram Alone
Here, we’re revisiting the Microsoft setup but this time focusing only on the histogram, without the MFI slope line.
Even without the directional slope, the histogram showed rising volume pressure while price continued to drift lower. This visual pattern may indicate that buying interest was quietly increasing, despite weak price movement.
This is where the histogram adds value: it helps visualize the intensity of volume flow over time. When volume pressure builds during a flat or declining price phase, it can be consistent with accumulation where larger participants begin positioning before the market responds.
This example highlights how the histogram alone can provide early insight into underlying volume dynamics even before price shifts noticeably.
Filtering with EMA and why It Matters
Here, we revisit the Microsoft example this time applying the 200 EMA filter, which helps define the broader trend.
Once enabled, LiquidEdge automatically removed any bullish or bearish divergence signals that were against the prevailing trend. This helped reduce noise and focus only on setups aligned with market structure.
✅ The EMA acts as a contextual filter.
For example, if a bullish divergence occurs during a confirmed downtrend, LiquidEdge suppresses that signal helping you avoid setups that may carry more risk.
This filtering mechanism is especially useful in fast or choppy markets, where not all divergences are meaningful.
Want More Flexibility? Adjust the Filter
If you're a more aggressive trader or prefer shorter-term signals, you can reduce the EMA length (e.g., to 150, 50, or even 25). This increases the number of setups shown but also raises the importance of additional context and confirmation.
⚠️ Keep in mind:
❌ More signals doesn’t always mean better outcomes
✅ Focused, context-aware signals tend to be more consistent with broader market pressure
If you’re using this in combination with strategies like options trading, this filter can help refine your entry zones especially when paired with other structure or volatility tools.
Distribution Example and Bitcoin Setup Before a Major Drop
In this example, Bitcoin was trading in a relatively tight range while price continued to push upward. However, LiquidEdge began to show signs of volume outflow, which can suggest potential distribution.
Here’s what was observed:
🔴 Price was moving up inside a horizontal range
🔴 LiquidEdge’s slope indicated declining volume pressure
🔴 Several bearish divergence signals appeared during this consolidation phase
🔴 The histogram also showed weakening flow, even before price broke down
These overlapping signals pointed to a possible distribution phase, where buying momentum was fading despite price still holding up.
🧭 Signs to Watch for in Potential Distribution:
1️⃣ Price holding flat or rising slightly within a tight range
2️⃣ Volume pressure (line or histogram) sloping downward
3️⃣ Repeated bearish divergences forming at the highs
4️⃣ Lack of follow-through on bullish setups signaling hesitation in demand
While LiquidEdge can’t predict market outcomes, this scenario demonstrates how a combination of divergence, outflow, and failure to break out may serve as early warnings that momentum is shifting beneath the surface.
Failed Auction Example – Volume Shift Before a Breakdown
In this example, price attempted to break out above a recent high, creating the appearance of a bullish continuation. However, LiquidEdge began to signal volume outflow, despite the upward price move a potential sign of a failed auction.
Here’s what was observed:
👉 Price made a new high, appearing to break resistance
👉 LiquidEdge slope and histogram both showed declining liquidity
👉 The indicator formed lower lows, even as price pushed higher
👉 This divergence suggested that volume wasn’t supporting the breakout
Shortly after, price reversed and returned back inside the range which is a common characteristic of failed auction behavior.
🧭 Spotting a Potential Failed Auction with LiquidEdge:
1️⃣ Price breaks above a recent high
2️⃣ Volume flow (line + histogram) shows outflow, not inflow
3️⃣ Indicator forms lower lows while price makes higher highs (bearish divergence)
4️⃣ Market reverts back into the previous range without follow-through
While no tool can predict outcomes, this setup demonstrated how volume pressure and divergence can help identify moments where a breakout may lack real support offering context before price action confirms the shift.
Reading the Histogram - Spotting Pressure Fades
In this example, price was still rising but the LiquidEdge histogram showed falling volume pressure. This type of divergence between price and volume can serve as a potential early signal that momentum may be fading.
🔻 Histogram levels declined while price continued higher
🔻 This suggested that buying pressure was weakening, even though price hadn’t turned
🔻 Volume flow behavior didn’t support the continuation possibly indicating buyer exhaustion
Just before the peak, the histogram nearly reached its lower threshold, despite price still being near its highs.
💡 How to Read It:
When volume pressure (shown by the histogram) starts to fade while price is still rising, it can indicate that momentum is weakening. This may precede a pullback or reversal particularly if other factors like divergence or zone exhaustion are also present.
Conversely, rising histogram values during a price drop may suggest potential accumulation.
👉 Use the histogram as a volume intensity gauge, not a signal on its own especially when evaluating whether a move is supported by actual flow, or just price momentum.
The Table – Fast, Visual Multi-Timeframe Flow Insight
The multi-timeframe flow table in LiquidEdge provides a consolidated view of volume momentum across several key timeframes so you don’t need to switch between charts to compare flow strength.
👉 Instead of flipping from 5-minute to 15M, 1H, 4H, and Daily, the table displays flow direction on all of them at a glance.
Example layout:
🔼 Daily: Up
🔽 1H: Down
🔼 15M: Up
🔽 5M: Down
This setup gives you a quick read on whether volume momentum is aligned across multiple timeframes or diverging which can help frame your trade approach.
🧠 Why It’s Useful:
✅ Supports timeframe alignment
If higher timeframes show strong inflow while lower ones are mixed, you may interpret it as a swing-based opportunity. If short timeframes show pressure but higher frames are flat, it might suggest short-term setups with caution.
✅ Improves context awareness
Instead of interpreting a move in isolation, the table helps you assess whether short-term signals are part of a broader shift or going against higher timeframe flow.
💡 Pro Tip: Use the table as a starting point in your analysis. It’s a simple but effective snapshot of current liquidity pressure across the board helping you plan trades with broader context, rather than reacting chart-by-chart.
🔚 Final Thoughts
If you're focused on trading with better clarity and structure, LiquidEdge is designed to help you interpret what’s happening beneath the surface not just follow price movement.
While many tools highlight price alone, LiquidEdge combines volume pressure, divergence filtering, and trend-based context to help identify potential areas of accumulation, distribution, or momentum shifts even before they become obvious on a chart.
👉 This isn’t just another signal tool. It’s a framework to support smarter decision-making:
✔️ One that helps you filter out noise
✔️ One that scores setups using multiple layers of confirmation
✔️ One that brings volume context into every trade idea
Whether you're scalping on a 5-minute chart or managing a longer-term swing trade, LiquidEdge is built to help you stay aligned with volume-driven behavior not just react to price alone.
If you've struggled with late entries, unreliable setups, or second-guessing trades, this tool was designed to bring more structure to your process. It won’t remove all uncertainty but it can help you stay more selective, confident, and intentional.
✅ Trade with clarity
✅ Stay process-driven
✅ Focus on structure, not noise
LiquidEdge is not meant to replace your strategy. It’s here to enhance it.
In this chart, the 200 EMA filter was applied. As a result, only signals that aligned with the dominant trend direction were displayed helping to reduce distractions and focus on setups with stronger context.
💡 Using a higher EMA setting like 200 can reduce the number of signals shown, but may help you focus on higher-conviction opportunities.
That said, every trader is different:
Longer EMAs = fewer signals, but more trend-filtered setups
Shorter EMAs = more signals, faster entries but with potentially more noise
👉 Adjust the filter based on your trading style. Use a 200 EMA for swing trading, or reduce it to 50, 25, or even 5 if you're trading more aggressively or intraday.
LiquidEdge adapts to you not the other way around.
🔁 Adjusting EMA for Your Trading Style
Personal Tip: When trading more aggressively, I often use a 5 EMA filter especially when combining histogram strength with other tools. This increases signal responsiveness and may help highlight short-term flow shifts more quickly.
Below are visual examples that show how different EMA lengths impact the behavior of LiquidEdge:
50 EMA ON
25 EMA ON
5 EMA ON
Lower EMA Example – Gold with the 5 EMA
In this example, the 5 EMA filter was applied to Gold. As expected, more signals were plotted compared to higher EMA settings. The tool became more responsive to rapid shifts in volume momentum, making it more suitable for fast-paced trading environments.
This setting can help traders who prefer early entries but it also introduces more sensitivity, so context and additional confirmation become even more important.
Each setting affects signal frequency and filtering:
Higher EMA → fewer signals, more trend-confirmed setups
Lower EMA → more signals, quicker responses, but with more potential for noise
Choose what fits your approach:
Long-term swing → Stick with 200 EMA
Intraday or scalping → Consider shorter EMAs (50, 25, or 5)
💡 Reminder: EMA filtering is fully adjustable. LiquidEdge doesn’t lock you into one trading style it’s meant to adapt to your process, whether you’re swing trading or scalping short-term moves.
But There’s a Catch…
Using a lower EMA setting (like 5) opens up faster, more frequent signals but it also increases the need for precision and stronger trade management.
❗ More signals = More responsiveness
❗ Faster setups mean quicker decisions
❗ Risk control becomes even more important
💡 Lower Timeframes = More Detail, Less Margin for Error
A short EMA (like 5) can help you:
✅ Identify early momentum shifts
✅ Respond before traditional trend-followers
✅ Highlight short-term divergence and volume changes
But it also comes with tradeoffs:
❌ Greater signal noise
❌ Higher potential for misreads or fakeouts
❌ Requires clear structure and disciplined entries
🚩 Watch Out for Liquidity Grabs
In lower timeframes, a common trap is the liquidity grab where price pushes beyond recent highs or lows, triggers stops, then quickly reverses.
📌 These moves can look like breakouts, but often reverse quickly possibly reflecting institutional order placement or low-liquidity manipulation.
🧭 How to Approach It Smartly
✅ Use structure: Mark support and resistance to frame moves
✅ Confirm volume behavior: Is histogram strength rising or fading?
✅ Avoid chasing: Look for confluence, not just a single signal
✅ Be intentional with stops: Place them with structure in mind to avoid being swept out
NASDAQ Futures Example – Low Timeframe Setups with LiquidEdge
In this example, we look at how LiquidEdge was used to identify both short and long setups on the NASDAQ Futures (NQ) particularly on a low timeframe (5M), where quick decision-making and volume precision matter most.
⚠️ A Note on Futures and Volume
When trading futures, especially on intraday charts, it’s important to separate overnight volume from regular session activity.
🕒 Overnight Volume ≠ Real Volume Context
Overnight price action is informative, but the volume data itself may not reflect true market participation. In LiquidEdge, histogram and pressure calculations emphasize regular session flow helping avoid skewed signals that could come from low-volume overnight moves.
Using the Histogram to Spot Potential Shifts
One of the key cues I use is color transition in the histogram:
🔴 A flip from strong green to red can signal fading buying pressure, sometimes marking the beginning of a potential short setup.
🟢 A shift from red to green may indicate that buyers are returning, suggesting possible accumulation.
These shifts serve as early visual cues of changing pressure especially when confirmed by other tools or context.
🔁 Adding Context with the Line + Structure
After spotting a histogram shift, I look at:
1️⃣ Slope Line – Is it confirming the same directional pressure?
2️⃣ Support/Resistance – Are we near a meaningful zone?
3️⃣ Additional Tools – This includes trendlines, VWAP, EMAs, and overall price structure.
On lower timeframes like 5M, these pieces become even more important. LiquidEdge gives directional insight, but your full setup provides confirmation and execution logic.
⚠️ Disclaimer
LiquidEdge is not a signal tool. It’s a visual representation of market pressure and flow designed to help you make more informed trading and investing decisions. It shows you what’s happening beneath the price action but you are still responsible for your decisions.
Always combine LiquidEdge with your own strategy, research, and supporting tools. That includes trend analysis, support/resistance levels, chart patterns, and fundamentals (like P/E ratios, price-to-sales, debt ratios, etc.).
This tool should never be used alone or treated as financial advice.
Some content may include AI-powered enhancements for clarity or formatting.
Always do your own research. For personal financial guidance, speak with a licensed financial advisor.
Trendline Breakouts With Volume Strength [TradeDots]Trendline Breakouts With Volume Strength is an innovative indicator designed to identify potential market turning points using pivot-based trendline detection and volume confirmation. By merging dynamic trendline analysis with multi-tiered volume filters, this tool helps traders quickly spot breakouts or breakdowns that may signal significant shifts in price action.
📝 HOW IT WORKS
1. Pivot-Based Trendline Detection
The script automatically scans for recent pivot highs and lows over a user-defined lookback period.
When it finds higher pivot lows, it plots green uptrend lines; when it finds lower pivot highs, it plots red downtrend lines.
These dynamic lines update as new pivots form, providing continuously refreshed trend guidance.
2. Volume Ratio Analysis
A moving average of volume is compared against the current bar’s volume to calculate a ratio (e.g., 1.5×, 2×).
Higher ratios suggest above-average volume, often interpreted as stronger participation.
The script applies color-coded cues to highlight the intensity of volume surges.
3. Breakout & Breakdown Detection
Each trendline is monitored for a defined “break threshold,” which helps avoid minor penetrations that can trigger premature signals.
When price closes beyond a threshold below an uptrend line, the indicator labels it a “BREAKDOWN.” If it closes above a threshold on a downtrend line, it labels it a “BREAKOUT.”
Volume surges accompanying these breaks are highlighted with contextual emojis and distinct color gradients for quick visual reference.
4. Trend Direction Table
A small on-chart table provides a snapshot of the current market trend—Uptrend, Downtrend, or Sideways—based on a simple moving average slope and the number of active uptrend or downtrend lines.
This table also displays quick stats on how many lines are actively tracked, helping traders assess the broader market posture at a glance.
🛠️ HOW TO USE
1. Choose a Timeframe
This script works on multiple timeframes. Intraday traders can monitor minute or hourly charts for frequent pivot updates, while swing and position traders may prefer daily or weekly intervals to reduce noise.
2. Observe Trendlines & Labels
Watch for newly drawn green/red lines connecting pivots.
When you see a “BREAKOUT” or “BREAKDOWN” label, confirm whether volume was abnormally high based on the ratio or color-coded bars.
3. Consult the Trend Table
Use the table in the bottom-right corner to quickly check if the market is trending or range-bound.
Look at the count of active uptrend vs. downtrend lines to gauge broader sentiment.
4. Employ Additional Analysis
Combine these signals with other tools (e.g., candlestick patterns, oscillators, or fundamental analysis).
Validate potential breakouts using standard techniques like retests or support/resistance checks.
❗️LIMITATIONS
Delayed Pivots: Trendlines only adjust once new pivot highs or lows form, which can introduce a slight lag in highly volatile environments.
Choppy Markets: Rapid, back-and-forth price moves may produce conflicting trendline signals and frequent breakouts/breakdowns.
Volume Data Reliability: Gaps in volume data or unusual market conditions (holidays, low-liquidity sessions) can skew ratio readings.
RISK DISCLAIMER
Trading any financial instrument involves substantial risk, and this indicator does not guarantee profits or prevent losses. All signals and visual cues are for educational and informational purposes only; past performance does not assure future outcomes. You retain full responsibility for your trading decisions, including proper risk management, position sizing, and the use of additional confirmation methods. Always consider the possibility of losing some or all of your original investment.
Indicator: Volatility Candle Based 📊 Volatility Candle-Based Indicator (Pine Script v6)
This custom TradingView indicator is designed for futures traders who want to analyze volatility, candle patterns, and support/resistance zones within specific market hours. It overlays price charts and provides visual signals that help determine potential momentum shifts, trend continuations, or reversals.
🔧 Core Features
⏰ Futures Time Filter
The indicator activates only during specific trading hours, customized per futures contract (e.g., NQ, ES, GC).
Time is adjusted to the New York (EST) timezone.
This ensures the logic only runs during relevant futures market sessions.
💹 Contract-Specific Multipliers
Applies custom point multipliers for futures contracts (e.g., GC = 30, ES = 24).
Supports three types of multipliers:
Trailing Stop
Trailing Plot Stop
Stop Loss
Ensures accurate backtesting and risk modeling for each contract.
📈 Trendline Support & Resistance
Uses pivot high/low logic to dynamically plot:
Central pivot zones
Step-like support/resistance lines
These trendlines update based on price behavior and can indicate bullish or bearish control.
🔍 Candle Momentum Analysis
Evaluates each candle's:
Body-to-range ratio (e.g., Marubozu, Doji)
Shadow dominance (upper/lower wicks)
Detects important reversal or continuation patterns such as:
Bullish/Bearish Inside Candles
Doji Star formations
Uses a custom moving average to confirm directional bias.
🕯️ Plotter Candle Signals
Identifies BullishPlotter and BearishPlotter candles:
Highlights candles likely to signal upcoming momentum.
Also accounts for neutral signals when no clear bias is detected.
Tracks the high/low of recent signal candles for reference.
📌 Visual Elements (not shown in snippet but implied by logic)
Signal arrows, dashed current levels, and filled support/resistance zones can be plotted to provide real-time feedback.
These are useful for both manual trading and strategy development.
🎯 Use Case
Perfect for intraday or short-term futures traders on instruments like:
🟡 Gold (GC), 🟠 Silver (SI)
📉 Nasdaq (NQ/MNQ), S&P 500 (ES/MES)
This script provides both structural context (trendlines, pivots) and price action signals (candle formations, momentum shifts), helping traders align their decisions with the underlying market flow.
Multi-Period ChartsThis Pine Script v6 indicator is titled "Multi-Period Charts" and is designed to provide traders with dynamic support/resistance levels, momentum-based trendlines, and shaded areas representing higher timeframes—all layered over the current chart to offer multi-timeframe market context.
🔍 Overview
The script offers a comprehensive view of market structure, combining:
Pivot-based support and resistance
Momentum-driven trendlines
MACD-style candle coloring
Higher-timeframe box overlays
Each element is modular and can be customized through inputs for different strategies and timeframes.
🧱 Key Features
1. Pivot-Based Support & Resistance Lines
Uses ta.pivothigh and ta.pivotlow to detect significant swing highs/lows.
A dynamic centerline is calculated from recent pivots.
Generates TUp and TDown bands that evolve with price action.
Determines the trend direction based on whether the price is above or below these bands.
2. Trendline Signal Support
Based on moving averages of high/low and close prices across a long period.
Draws a support line with a slope-check to determine if the market is bullish or bearish.
Support lines are color-coded to reflect the directional bias (bullish, bearish, or neutral).
3. Candle Coloring Logic
Candles are categorized into:
LongCandles (above both trend and support lines)
ShortCandles (below both lines)
NeutralCandle (between them)
Candles can also be shaded differently when they are downward candles, even within a bullish setup.
4. Multi-Timeframe Box Overlays
Automatically selects a higher timeframe (HTF) based on the current chart.
Draws boxes that represent the range of the selected HTF bar (e.g., day, week, month).
Boxes are colored based on whether price closed up or down.
Supports multiple methods to determine the top/bottom of the box:
High/Low Range (HLR)
True Range (TR)
Heikin Ashi Range (HAR)
5. Period Line
Calculates a smoothed line from the average of each HTF box’s top/bottom.
Useful for identifying long-term trend alignment.
⚙️ Inputs & Customizations
Pivot settings: Number of bars to look back and forward, factor, and spread.
Trendline settings: Moving average lengths and slope sensitivity.
HTF box settings: Resolution (manual or auto), color options, calculation method.
📈 Visual Output
Trendline and support line (optional display).
HTF range boxes (highlighting bullish or bearish sessions).
Color-coded candles indicating alignment or divergence from trend.
Invisible PeriodLine for advanced strategy developers.
💡 Use Case
This indicator is ideal for:
Swing and intraday traders who want to trade in the direction of larger trends.
Traders who rely on multi-timeframe analysis to find confluence.
Users looking to combine price structure (pivot-based) and momentum (moving average-based) for trend validation.
The Traders Support & Resistance LevelsThis script automatically detects pivot-based support and resistance levels and draws dynamic trendlines based on recent price action.
🔹 Support & Resistance Levels
Pivot points are calculated using customizable left/right bar logic. A pivot high (or low) is confirmed when leftBars candles to the left and rightBars candles to the right are lower (or higher).
Triangles are plotted when a level is confirmed:
🔻 🟡 Yellow Down Triangle = Confirmed Resistance
🔺 🟣 Purple Up Triangle = Confirmed Support
Lines are drawn at confirmed levels.
If enough lines are confirmed, the oldest one is converted into a zone using a thick, semi-transparent line.
🔹 Trendline Logic
Trendlines are drawn between the last two support points (for uptrend) and last two resistance points (for downtrend).
The slope and price relationship determine trend strength, visualized by color:
Condition Color Meaning
Uptrend + Price Above + Steep 🟨 Yellow Strong Uptrend
Uptrend + Price Above 🔷 Blue Weak Uptrend
Downtrend + Price Below + Steep 💗 Fuchsia Strong Downtrend
Downtrend + Price Below 🟣 Purple Weak Downtrend
Otherwise ⚪️ Gray Neutral / No Trend
⚙️ Customizable Inputs
leftBars, rightBars: Adjust sensitivity of pivot detection
previewBars: Show early "draft" lines before confirmation
volumeThresh: Reserved for future enhancements
PowerHouse SwiftEdge AI v2.10 with Custom Filters & AI AnalysisPowerHouse SwiftEdge AI v2.10 with Custom Filters & AI Analysis
Overview
PowerHouse SwiftEdge AI v2.10 is an advanced TradingView Pine Script indicator designed to identify high-probability trading setups by combining pivot-based structure analysis, multi-timeframe trend detection, and adaptive AI-driven signal filtering. The script integrates Change of Character (CHoCH) and Break of Structure (BOS) signals with customizable momentum, volume, breakout, and trend filters to enhance trade precision. Additionally, it offers an optional AI Market Analysis module that predicts future price trends across multiple timeframes, providing traders with a comprehensive market outlook.
The script is highly customizable, allowing users to tailor inputs to their trading style, whether for scalping, swing trading, or long-term strategies. It is suitable for all asset classes, including stocks, forex, crypto, and commodities, and performs optimally on timeframes ranging from 1-minute to daily charts.
Key Features
Pivot-Based Signal Generation:
Identifies pivot highs and lows to detect CHoCH (reversal patterns) and BOS (continuation patterns).
Signals are plotted as "Buy" or "Sell" labels with optional "Get Ready" pre-signals to prepare traders for potential setups.
Take-profit (TP) levels are automatically calculated based on user-defined points, with optional TP box visualization.
Multi-Timeframe Trend Analysis:
Analyzes trends across seven timeframes (1M, 5M, 15M, 30M, 1H, 4H, D) using EMA and VWAP to determine bullish, bearish, or neutral conditions.
Displays a futuristic AI-Trend Matrix dashboard showing trend direction, strength, and confidence levels for quick decision-making.
Customizable Signal Filters:
Momentum Filter: Ensures signals align with significant price changes, adjusted dynamically using ATR-based volatility.
Higher Timeframe Trend Filter: Requires signals to align with the trend of a user-selected higher timeframe (e.g., 1H).
Lower Timeframe Trend Filter: Prevents signals that conflict with the trend of a user-selected lower timeframe (e.g., 5M).
Volume Filter: Optionally requires above-average volume to confirm signals.
Breakout Filter: Optionally requires price to break previous highs/lows for signal validation.
Repeated Signal Restriction: Prevents consecutive signals in the same trend direction until the trend changes on a user-defined timeframe.
AI-Driven Adaptivity:
Incorporates Cumulative Volume Delta (CVD) to assess buying/selling pressure and classify market volatility (Low, Medium, High).
Uses ATR to dynamically adjust momentum thresholds, ensuring signals adapt to current market conditions.
Optional AI Market Analysis module predicts trends across multiple timeframes by combining trend, momentum, and volatility scores.
Visual Elements:
Plots CHoCH and BOS levels as horizontal lines with distinct colors (aqua for CHoCH sell, lime for CHoCH buy, fuchsia for BOS sell, teal for BOS buy).
Draws dynamic support and resistance trendlines based on short and long-term price action, colored by trend strength.
Displays TP levels and pivot highs/lows for easy reference.
How It Works
The script combines several technical analysis concepts to create a robust trading system:
Market Structure Analysis:
Pivot highs and lows are identified using a user-defined lookback period (Pivot Length).
CHoCH occurs when price crosses below a pivot high (bearish reversal) or above a pivot low (bullish reversal).
BOS occurs when price breaks a previous pivot low (bearish continuation) or pivot high (bullish continuation).
Trend and Momentum Integration:
Trends are determined by comparing price to EMA and VWAP on multiple timeframes.
Momentum is calculated as the percentage price change, with thresholds adjusted by ATR to account for volatility.
"Get Ready" signals appear when momentum approaches the threshold, preparing traders for potential CHoCH or BOS signals.
Signal Filtering:
Filters ensure signals align with user-defined criteria (e.g., trend direction, volume, breakouts).
The Restrict Repeated Signals option prevents over-signaling by requiring a trend change on a specified timeframe before generating a new signal in the same direction.
AI Market Analysis:
The optional AI module calculates a score for each timeframe based on trend direction, momentum, and volatility (ATR compared to its SMA).
Scores are translated into predictions (▲ for bullish, ▼ for bearish, — for neutral), displayed in a dedicated table.
CVD and Volatility Context:
CVD tracks buying vs. selling pressure by accumulating volume based on price direction.
Volatility is classified using CVD magnitude, influencing the script’s visual cues and signal sensitivity.
Why This Combination?
The integration of pivot-based structure analysis, multi-timeframe trend filtering, and AI-driven adaptivity addresses common trading challenges:
Precision: CHoCH and BOS signals focus on key market turning points, reducing noise from minor price fluctuations.
Context: Multi-timeframe analysis ensures trades align with broader market trends, improving win rates.
Adaptivity: ATR and CVD adjustments make the script responsive to changing market conditions, avoiding static thresholds that fail in volatile or quiet markets.
Customization: Extensive input options allow traders to adapt the script to their preferred markets, timeframes, and risk profiles.
Predictive Insight: The AI Market Analysis module provides forward-looking trend predictions, helping traders anticipate market moves.
This combination creates a self-contained system that balances responsiveness with reliability, making it suitable for both novice and experienced traders.
How to Use
Add to Chart:
Apply the indicator to your TradingView chart for any asset and timeframe.
Recommended timeframes: 5M to 1H for scalping/day trading, 4H to D for swing trading.
Configure Inputs:
Pivot Length: Adjust (default 5) to control sensitivity to pivot highs/lows. Lower values for faster signals, higher for stronger confirmations.
Momentum Threshold: Set the minimum price change (default 0.01%) for signals. Increase for stricter conditions.
Take Profit Points: Define TP distance (default 10 points). Adjust based on asset volatility.
Signal Filters: Enable/disable filters (momentum, trend, volume, breakout) to match your strategy.
Higher/Lower Timeframe: Select timeframes for trend alignment (e.g., 1H for higher, 5M for lower).
AI Market Analysis: Enable for predictive trend insights across timeframes.
Get Ready Signals: Enable to see pre-signals for potential setups.
Interpret Signals:
Buy/Sell Labels: Act on green "Buy" or red "Sell" labels, confirming with TP levels and trend direction.
Get Ready Labels: Yellow "Get Ready BUY" or orange "Get Ready SELL" indicate potential setups; prepare but wait for confirmation.
CHoCH/BOS Lines: Use aqua/lime (CHoCH) and fuchsia/teal (BOS) lines as key support/resistance levels.
AI-Trend Matrix: Check the top-right dashboard for trend strength (%), confidence (%), and timeframe-specific trends.
AI Market Analysis Table: If enabled, view predictions (▲/▼/—) for each timeframe to anticipate market direction.
Trading Tips:
Combine signals with other indicators (e.g., RSI, MACD) for additional confirmation.
Use higher timeframe trend alignment for higher-probability trades.
Adjust TP and signal distance based on asset volatility and trading style.
Monitor the AI-Trend Matrix for trend strength; values above 50% or below -50% indicate strong directional bias.
Originality
PowerHouse SwiftEdge AI v2.10 stands out due to its unique blend of:
Adaptive Signal Generation: ATR-based momentum thresholds and CVD-driven volatility context ensure signals remain relevant across market conditions.
Multi-Timeframe Synergy: The script’s ability to filter signals based on both higher and lower timeframe trends provides a rare balance of precision and context.
AI-Powered Insights: The AI Market Analysis module offers predictive capabilities not commonly found in traditional indicators, simulating institutional-grade analysis.
Visual Clarity: The futuristic dashboard and color-coded trendlines make complex data accessible, enhancing usability for all trader levels.
Unlike standalone pivot or trend indicators, this script integrates multiple layers of analysis into a cohesive system, reducing false signals and providing actionable insights without requiring external tools or research.
Limitations
False Signals: No indicator is foolproof; signals may fail in choppy or low-volume markets. Use filters to mitigate.
Timeframe Sensitivity: Performance varies by timeframe and asset. Test settings thoroughly.
AI Predictions: The AI Market Analysis is based on historical data and simplified scoring; it’s not a guaranteed forecast.
Resource Usage: Enabling all filters and AI analysis may slow performance on lower-end devices.
GIGANEVA V6.61 PublicThis enhanced Fibonacci script for TradingView is a powerful, all-in-one tool that calculates Fibonacci Levels, Fans, Time Pivots, and Golden Pivots on both logarithmic and linear scales. Its ability to compute time pivots via fan intersections and Range interactions, combined with user-friendly features like Bool Fib Right, sets it apart. The script maximizes TradingView’s plotting capabilities, making it a unique and versatile tool for technical analysis across various markets.
1. Overview of the Script
The script appears to be a custom technical analysis tool built for TradingView, improving upon an existing script from TradingView’s Community Scripts. It calculates and plots:
Fibonacci Levels: Standard retracement levels (e.g., 0.236, 0.382, 0.5, 0.618, etc.) based on a user-defined price range.
Fibonacci Fans: Trendlines drawn from a high or low point, radiating at Fibonacci ratios to project potential support/resistance zones.
Time Pivots: Points in time where significant price action is expected, determined by the intersection of Fibonacci Fans or their interaction with key price levels.
Golden Pivots: Specific time pivots calculated when the 0.5 Fibonacci Fan (on a logarithmic or linear scale) intersects with its counterpart.
The script supports both logarithmic and linear price scales, ensuring versatility across different charting preferences. It also includes a feature to extend Fibonacci Fans to the right, regardless of whether the user selects the top or bottom of the range first.
2. Key Components Explained
a) Fibonacci Levels and Fans from Top and Bottom of the "Range"
Fibonacci Levels: These are horizontal lines plotted at standard Fibonacci retracement ratios (e.g., 0.236, 0.382, 0.5, 0.618, etc.) based on a user-defined price range (the "Range"). The Range is typically the distance between a significant high (top) and low (bottom) on the chart.
Example: If the high is $100 and the low is $50, the 0.618 retracement level would be at $80.90 ($50 + 0.618 × $50).
Fibonacci Fans: These are diagonal lines drawn from either the top or bottom of the Range, radiating at Fibonacci ratios (e.g., 0.382, 0.5, 0.618). They project potential dynamic support or resistance zones as price evolves over time.
From Top: Fans drawn downward from the high of the Range.
From Bottom: Fans drawn upward from the low of the Range.
Log and Linear Scale:
Logarithmic Scale: Adjusts price intervals to account for percentage changes, which is useful for assets with large price ranges (e.g., cryptocurrencies or stocks with exponential growth). Fibonacci calculations on a log scale ensure ratios are proportional to percentage moves.
Linear Scale: Uses absolute price differences, suitable for assets with smaller, more stable price ranges.
The script’s ability to plot on both scales makes it adaptable to different markets and user preferences.
b) Time Pivots
Time pivots are points in time where significant price action (e.g., reversals, breakouts) is anticipated. The script calculates these in two ways:
Fans Crossing Each Other:
When two Fibonacci Fans (e.g., one from the top and one from the bottom) intersect, their crossing point represents a potential time pivot. This is because the intersection indicates a convergence of dynamic support/resistance zones, increasing the likelihood of a price reaction.
Example: A 0.618 fan from the top crosses a 0.382 fan from the bottom at a specific bar on the chart, marking that bar as a time pivot.
Fans Crossing Top and Bottom of the Range:
A fan line (e.g., 0.5 fan from the bottom) may intersect the top or bottom price level of the Range at a specific time. This intersection highlights a moment where the fan’s projected support/resistance aligns with a key price level, signaling a potential pivot.
Example: The 0.618 fan from the bottom reaches the top of the Range ($100) at bar 50, marking bar 50 as a time pivot.
c) Golden Pivots
Definition: Golden pivots are a special type of time pivot calculated when the 0.5 Fibonacci Fan on one scale (logarithmic or linear) intersects with the 0.5 fan on the opposite scale (or vice versa).
Significance: The 0.5 level is the midpoint of the Fibonacci sequence and often acts as a critical balance point in price action. When fans at this level cross, it suggests a high-probability moment for a price reversal or significant move.
Example: If the 0.5 fan on a logarithmic scale (drawn from the bottom) crosses the 0.5 fan on a linear scale (drawn from the top) at bar 100, this intersection is labeled a "Golden Pivot" due to its confluence of key Fibonacci levels.
d) Bool Fib Right
This is a user-configurable setting (a boolean input in the script) that extends Fibonacci Fans to the right side of the chart.
Functionality: When enabled, the fans project forward in time, regardless of whether the user selected the top or bottom of the Range first. This ensures consistency in visualization, as the direction of the Range selection (top-to-bottom or bottom-to-top) does not affect the fan’s extension.
Use Case: Traders can use this to project future support/resistance zones without worrying about how they defined the Range, improving usability.
3. Why Is This Code Unique?
Original calculation of Log levels were taken from zekicanozkanli code. Thank you for giving me great Foundation, later modified and applied to Fib fans. The script’s uniqueness stems from its comprehensive integration of Fibonacci-based tools and its optimization for TradingView’s plotting capabilities. Here’s a detailed breakdown:
All-in-One Fibonacci Tool:
Most Fibonacci scripts on TradingView focus on either retracement levels, extensions, or fans.
This script combines:
Fibonacci Levels: Static horizontal lines for retracement and extension.
Fibonacci Fans: Dynamic trendlines for projecting support/resistance.
Time Pivots: Temporal analysis based on fan intersections and Range interactions.
Golden Pivots: Specialized pivots based on 0.5 fan confluences.
By integrating these functions, the script provides a holistic Fibonacci analysis tool, reducing the need for multiple scripts.
Log and Linear Scale Support:
Many Fibonacci tools are designed for linear scales only, which can distort projections for assets with exponential price movements. By supporting both logarithmic and linear scales, the script caters to a wider range of markets (e.g., stocks, forex, crypto) and user preferences.
Time Pivot Calculations:
Calculating time pivots based on fan intersections and Range interactions is a novel feature. Most TradingView scripts focus on price-based Fibonacci levels, not temporal analysis. This adds a predictive element, helping traders anticipate when significant price action might occur.
Golden Pivot Innovation:
The concept of "Golden Pivots" (0.5 fan intersections across scales) is a unique addition. It leverages the symmetry of the 0.5 level and the differences between log and linear scales to identify high-probability pivot points.
Maximized Plot Capabilities:
TradingView imposes limits on the number of plots (lines, labels, etc.) a script can render. This script is coded to fully utilize these limits, ensuring that all Fibonacci levels, fans, pivots, and labels are plotted without exceeding TradingView’s constraints.
This optimization likely involves efficient use of arrays, loops, and conditional plotting to manage resources while delivering a rich visual output.
User-Friendly Features:
The Bool Fib Right option simplifies fan projection, making the tool intuitive even for users who may not consistently select the Range in the same order.
The script’s flexibility in handling top/bottom Range selection enhances usability.
4. Potential Use Cases
Trend Analysis: Traders can use Fibonacci Fans to identify dynamic support/resistance zones in trending markets.
Reversal Trading: Time pivots and Golden Pivots help pinpoint moments for potential price reversals.
Range Trading: Fibonacci Levels provide key price zones for trading within a defined range.
Cross-Market Application: Log/linear scale support makes the script suitable for stocks, forex, commodities, and cryptocurrencies.
The original code was from zekicanozkanli . Thank you for giving me great Foundation.
EQS by SiriusProtected Script Description: "EQS by Sirius"
This indicator is protected and published as invite-only due to its original multi-timeframe structure, advanced visual logic, and proprietary handling of liquidity zones and equal high/low detection. The complexity of its design—featuring adaptive time-based plotting, contextual tooltips, and dynamic zone tracking—reflects a level of custom development intended for professional use, necessitating source protection.
Purpose and Core Logic
“EQS by Sirius” is designed to detect and visualize Equal Highs and Equal Lows (EQS) across multiple timeframes. These levels are commonly interpreted as potential liquidity zones or key market structures, often used by traders for identifying breakout traps, stop hunts, or reversal points. The script applies a precision-based algorithm to identify these EQS levels, providing users with visual cues to support decision-making in various market contexts.
The detection logic is based on comparing the difference between two successive highs (or lows) relative to the high-low range of the bars, allowing the user to fine-tune sensitivity via a precision parameter. When valid EQS conditions are met, horizontal lines are drawn at the detected price level, accompanied by optional shadow trendlines to represent liquidity channels.
Visual Outputs and Features
The indicator provides a rich and customizable visual environment, including:
Multi-Timeframe EQS Detection: Configurable from 1-minute to 4-hour timeframes with automatic sequencing.
Zone Highlighting: Optional background shading for designated date intervals.
Dynamic Shadow Mode: Projects angled trendlines representing potential liquidity zones based on EQS formations.
Touch Counters: Real-time counting of price interactions with plotted EQS levels.
Tooltips: Each label includes a timestamp and price breakdown to provide contextual clarity.
Line Customization: Adjustable color, width, and transparency for each EQS type and its shadow projections.
Auto-zoom Scaling: Adapts visual density based on the active chart’s timeframe.
Visibility Filters: Adjustable proximity thresholds ensure only relevant lines are displayed based on current price action.
How to Use in Trading
Traders can use this tool to:
Identify liquidity targets where price may reverse or accelerate due to stop hunts or breakout traps.
Analyze multi-timeframe confluence by comparing EQS zones from higher timeframes with local market structure.
Monitor touch counts to assess the strength or weakening of support/resistance levels.
Visualize trendline-based liquidity zones using the “shadow mode” to infer possible manipulation or price magnet areas.
Integrate with existing strategies for entry/exit timing, particularly in breakout and mean-reversion models.
Due to the high level of customizability and visual control, the script is suitable for discretionary traders, smart money concept practitioners, and those seeking to combine structural analysis with liquidity mapping.






















