ReversalCandlestickPatternWithTrendIndentifierGMLibrary "ReversalCandlestickPatternWithTrendIndentifierGM"
Provides functions calculating the all-time high/low of values.
reversalCandlestickPatternWithTrendIndentifier(bullishcriteria, bearishcriteria, momentumOscillatorTypeInput) Calculates the Reversal Candlestick Pattern With Trend Indentifier.
Parameters:
bullishcriteria : Stoch RSI/RSI Bullish Criteria. defval=70, minval=60, maxval=100
bearishcriteria : Stoch RSI/RSI Bearish Criteria. defval=30, minval=0, maxval=40
momentumOscillatorTypeInput : Momentum Oscillator Type. options=
Returns: Reversal Candlestick Pattern With Trend Indentifier.
Cerca negli script per "市值60亿的股票"
Demeter StrategyDemeter Strategy is Stochastic oscillator (5 3 3) and SMA (60) system with small modification.
This strategy has 6 signals.
(These 6 signals can be used in every market.)
Main signals :
Green Call : Call (Buy)
Reg Put : Put (Sell)
Secondary signal :
Yellow Call : Call (Buy)
Orange Put : Put (Sell)
Fast signal :
White Call : Call (Buy)
Gray Put : Put (Sell)
In trading, any signal can be used.
R3 ETF StrategyThis strategy is a modification of the “R3 Strategy” from the book "High Probability ETF Trading" by Larry Connors and Cesar Alvarez. This RSI strategy is for a 1-day time-frame and has these 3 simple rules:
Criteria:
The price must be above the 200 day moving average.
The 2-period (day) RSI drops 3 days in a row.
The 2-period RSI must have been below 60 3 days ago and below 10 today.
Entry and Exit:
If the 3 rules above are true, then buy on the close of the current day.
Exit on the day's close when the RSI crosses above 70.
How it works :
The Strategy will buy when the buy conditions above are true. The strategy will sell when the RSI crosses above 70. The RSI period/length, and RSI entry/exit criteria thresholds have all been coded to be adjustable with inputs.
Plots :
Blue line = 200 Day EMA (Used as Entry Criteria)
Disclaimer: Open-source scripts I publish in the community are largely meant to spark ideas that can be used as building blocks for part of a more robust trade management strategy. If you would like to implement a version of any script, I would recommend making significant additions/modifications to the strategy & risk management functions. If you don’t know how to program in Pine, then hire a Pine-coder. We can help!
ZxLibraryLibrary "ZxLibrary"
ZxLibrary is an easy with more than 130 Indicators and more than 60 Candlestick Patterns.
WAP Maverick - (Dual EMA Smoothed VWAP) - [mutantdog]Short Version:
This here is my take on the popular VWAP indicator with several novel features including:
Dual EMA smoothing.
Arithmetic and Harmonic Mean plots.
Custom Anchor feat. Intraday Session Sizes.
2 Pairs of Bands.
Side Input for Connection to other Indicator.
This can be used 'out of the box' as a replacement VWAP, benefitting from smoother transitions and easy-to-use custom alerts.
By design however, this is intended to be a highly customisable alternative with many adjustable parameters and a pseudo-modular input system to connect with another indicator. Well suited for the tweakers around here and those who like to get a little more creative.
I made this primarily for crypto although it should work for other markets. Default settings are best suited to 15m timeframe - the anchor of 1 week is ideal for crypto which often follows a cyclical nature from Monday through Sunday. In 15m, the default ema length of 21 means that the wap comes to match a standard vwap towards the end of Monday. If using higher chart timeframes, i recommend decreasing the ema length to closely match this principle (suggested: for 1h chart, try length = 8; for 4h chart, length = 2 or 3 should suffice).
Note: the use of harmonic mean calculations will cause problems on any data source incorporating both positive and negative values, it may also return unusable results on extremely low-value charts (eg: low-sat coins in /btc pairs).
Long version:
The development of this project was one driven more by experimentation than a specific end-goal, however i have tried to fine-tune everything into a coherent usable end-product. With that in mind then, this walkthrough will follow something of a development chronology as i dissect the various functions.
DUAL-EMA SMOOTHING
At its core this is based upon / adapted from the standard vwap indicator provided by TradingView although I have modified and changed most of it. The first mod is the dual ema smoothing. Rather than simply applying an ema to the output of the standard vwap function, instead i have incorporated the ema in a manner analogous to the way smas are used within a standard vwma. Sticking for now with the arithmetic mean, the basic vwap calculation is simply sum(source * volume) / sum(volume) across the anchored period. In this case i have simply applied an ema to each of the numerator and denominator values resulting in ema(sum(source * volume)) / ema(sum(volume)) with the ema length independent of the anchor. This results in smoother (albeit slower) transitions than the aforementioned post-vwap method. Furthermore in the case when anchor period is equal to current timeframe, the result is a basic volume-weighted ema.
The example below shows a standard vwap (1week anchor) in blue, a 21-ema applied to the vwap in purple and a dual-21-ema smoothed wap in gold. Notably both ema types come to effectively resemble the standard vwap after around 24 hours into the new anchor session but how they behave in the meantime is very different. The dual-ema transitions quite gradually while the post-vwap ema immediately sets about trying to catch up. Incidentally. a similar and slower variation of the dual-ema can be achieved with dual-rma although i have not included it in this indicator, attempted analogues using sma or wma were far less useful however.
STANDARD DEVIATION AND BANDS
With this updated calculation, a corresponding update to the standard deviation is also required. The vwap has its own anchored volume-weighted st.dev but this cannot be used in combination with the ema smoothing so instead it has been recalculated appropriately. There are two pairs of bands with separate multipliers (stepped to 0.1x) and in both cases high and low bands can be activated or deactivated individually. An example usage for this would be to create different upper and lower bands for profit and stoploss targets. Alerts can be set easily for different crossing conditions, more on this later.
Alongside the bands, i have also added the option to shift ('Deviate') the entire indicator up or down according to a multiple of the corrected st.dev value. This has many potential uses, for example if we want to bias our analysis in one direction it may be useful to move the wap in the opposite. Or if the asset is trading within a narrow range and we are waiting on a breakout, we could shift to the desired level and set alerts accordingly. The 'Deviate' parameter applies to the entire indicator including the bands which will remain centred on the main WAP.
CUSTOM (W)ANCHOR
Ever thought about using a vwap with anchor periods smaller than a day? Here you can do just that. I've removed the Earnings/Dividends/Splits options from the basic vwap and added an 'Intraday' option instead. When selected, a custom anchor length can be created as a multiple of minutes (default steps of 60 mins but can input any value from 0 - 1440). While this may not seem at first like a useful feature for anyone except hi-speed scalpers, this actually offers more interesting potential than it appears.
When set to 0 minutes the current timeframe is always used, turning this into the basic volume-weighted ema mentioned earlier. When using other low time frames the anchor can act as a pre-ema filter creating a stepped effect akin to an adaptive MA. Used in combination with the bands, the result is a kind of volume-weighted adaptive exponential bollinger band; if such a thing does not already exist then this is where you create it. Alternatively, by combining two instances you may find potential interesting crosses between an intraday wap and a standard timeframe wap. Below is an example set to intraday with 480 mins, 2x st.dev bands and ema length 21. Included for comparison in purple is a standard 21 ema.
I'm sure there are many potential uses to be found here, so be creative and please share anything you come up with in the comments.
ARITHMETIC AND HARMONIC MEAN CALCULATIONS
The standard vwap uses the arithmetic mean in its calculation. Indeed, most mean calculations tend to be arithmetic: sma being the most widely used example. When volume weighting is involved though this can lead to a slight bias in favour of upward moves over downward. While the effect of this is minor, over longer anchor periods it can become increasingly significant. The harmonic mean, on the other hand, has the opposite effect which results in a value that is always lower than the arithmetic mean. By viewing both arithmetic and harmonic waps together, the extent to which they diverge from each other can be used as a visual reference of how much price has changed during the anchored period.
Furthermore, the harmonic mean may actually be the more appropriate one to use during downtrends or bearish periods, in principle at least. Consider that a short trade is functionally the same as a long trade on the inverse of the pair (eg: selling BTC/USD is the same as buying USD/BTC). With the harmonic mean being an inverse of the arithmetic then, it makes sense to use it instead. To illustrate this below is a snapshot of LUNA/USDT on the left with its inverse 1/(LUNA/USDT) = USDT/LUNA on the right. On both charts is a wap with identical settings, note the resistance on the left and its corresponding support on the right. It should be easy from this to see that the lower harmonic wap on the left corresponds to the upper arithmetic wap on the right. Thus, it would appear that the harmonic mean should be used in a downtrend. In principle, at least...
In reality though, it is not quite so black and white. Rarely are these values exact in their predictions and the sort of range one should allow for inaccuracies will likely be greater than the difference between these two means. Furthermore, the ema smoothing has already introduced some lag and thus additional inaccuracies. Nevertheless, the symmetry warrants its inclusion.
SIDE INPUT & ALERTS
Finally we move on to the pseudo-modular component here. While TradingView allows some interoperability between indicators, it is limited to just one connection. Any attempt to use multiple source inputs will remove this functionality completely. The workaround here is to instead use custom 'string' input menus for additional sources, preserving this function in the sole 'source' input. In this case, since the wap itself is dependant only price and volume, i have repurposed the full 'source' into the second 'side' input. This allows for a separate indicator to interact with this one that can be used for triggering alerts. You could even use another instance of this one (there is a hidden wap:mid plot intended for this use which is the midpoint between both means). Note that deleting a connected indicator may result in the deletion of those connected to it.
Preset alertconditions are available for crossings of the side input above and below the main wap, alongside several customisable alerts with corresponding visual markers based upon selectable conditions. Alerts for band crossings apply only to those that are active and only crossings of the type specified within the 'crosses' subsection of the indicator settings. The included options make it easy to create buy alerts specific to certain bands with sell alerts specific to other bands. The chart below shows two instances with differing anchor periods, both are connected with buy and sell alerts enabled for visible bands.
Okay... So that just about covers it here, i think. As mentioned earlier this is the product of various experiments while i have been learning my way around PineScript. Some of those experiments have been branched off from this in order to not over-clutter it with functions. The pseudo-modular design and the 'side' input are the result of an attempt to create a connective framework across various projects. Even on its own though, this should offer plenty of tweaking potential for anyone who likes to venture away from the usual standards, all the while still retaining its core purpose as a traders tool.
Thanks for checking this out. I look forward to any feedback below.
[Multi-layers][VDT]New multi-indicator to merge together three of the most popular indicators used by traders in technical analysis:
1) Ichimoku Cloud, with parameters editable by the trader. Default parameters are: 9-26-52-26
2) 3X Simple Moving Average (SMA), with periods editable by the trader. Default periods are: 20-50-200
3) 3X Exponential Moving Average (EMA), with periods editable by the trader. Default periods are: 7-60-200
Traders can decide whether to print or to hide each indicators separately in the graph, creating three different overlays.
pandas_taLibrary "pandas_ta"
Level: 3
Background
Today is the first day of 2022 and happy new year every tradingviewers! May health and wealth go along with you all the time. I use this chance to publish my 1st PINE v5 lib : pandas_ta
This is not a piece of cake like thing, which cost me a lot of time and efforts to build this lib. Beyond 300 versions of this script was iterated in draft.
Function
Library "pandas_ta"
PINE v5 Counterpart of Pandas TA - A Technical Analysis Library in Python 3 at github.com
The Original Pandas Technical Analysis (Pandas TA) is an easy to use library that leverages the Pandas package with more than 130 Indicators and Utility functions and more than 60 TA Lib Candlestick Patterns.
I realized most of indicators except Candlestick Patterns because tradingview built-in Candlestick Patterns are even more powerful!
I use this to verify pandas_ta python version indicators for myself, but I realize that maybe many may need similar lib for pine v5 as well.
Function Brief Descriptions (Pls find details in script comments)
bton --> Binary to number
wcp --> Weighted Closing Price (WCP)
counter --> Condition counter
xbt --> Between
ebsw --> Even Better SineWave (EBSW)
ao --> Awesome Oscillator (AO)
apo --> Absolute Price Oscillator (APO)
xrf --> Dynamic shifted values
bias --> Bias (BIAS)
bop --> Balance of Power (BOP)
brar --> BRAR (BRAR)
cci --> Commodity Channel Index (CCI)
cfo --> Chande Forcast Oscillator (CFO)
cg --> Center of Gravity (CG)
cmo --> Chande Momentum Oscillator (CMO)
coppock --> Coppock Curve (COPC)
cti --> Correlation Trend Indicator (CTI)
dmi --> Directional Movement Index(DMI)
er --> Efficiency Ratio (ER)
eri --> Elder Ray Index (ERI)
fisher --> Fisher Transform (FISHT)
inertia --> Inertia (INERTIA)
kdj --> KDJ (KDJ)
kst --> 'Know Sure Thing' (KST)
macd --> Moving Average Convergence Divergence (MACD)
mom --> Momentum (MOM)
pgo --> Pretty Good Oscillator (PGO)
ppo --> Percentage Price Oscillator (PPO)
psl --> Psychological Line (PSL)
pvo --> Percentage Volume Oscillator (PVO)
qqe --> Quantitative Qualitative Estimation (QQE)
roc --> Rate of Change (ROC)
rsi --> Relative Strength Index (RSI)
rsx --> Relative Strength Xtra (rsx)
rvgi --> Relative Vigor Index (RVGI)
slope --> Slope
smi --> SMI Ergodic Indicator (SMI)
sqz* --> Squeeze (SQZ) * NOTE: code sufferred from very strange error, code was commented.
sqz_pro --> Squeeze PRO(SQZPRO)
xfl --> Condition filter
stc --> Schaff Trend Cycle (STC)
stoch --> Stochastic (STOCH)
stochrsi --> Stochastic RSI (STOCH RSI)
trix --> Trix (TRIX)
tsi --> True Strength Index (TSI)
uo --> Ultimate Oscillator (UO)
willr --> William's Percent R (WILLR)
alma --> Arnaud Legoux Moving Average (ALMA)
xll --> Dynamic rolling lowest values
dema --> Double Exponential Moving Average (DEMA)
ema --> Exponential Moving Average (EMA)
fwma --> Fibonacci's Weighted Moving Average (FWMA)
hilo --> Gann HiLo Activator(HiLo)
hma --> Hull Moving Average (HMA)
hwma --> HWMA (Holt-Winter Moving Average)
ichimoku --> Ichimoku Kinkō Hyō (ichimoku)
jma --> Jurik Moving Average Average (JMA)
kama --> Kaufman's Adaptive Moving Average (KAMA)
linreg --> Linear Regression Moving Average (linreg)
mgcd --> McGinley Dynamic Indicator
rma --> wildeR's Moving Average (RMA)
sinwma --> Sine Weighted Moving Average (SWMA)
ssf --> Ehler's Super Smoother Filter (SSF) © 2013
supertrend --> Supertrend (supertrend)
xsa --> X simple moving average
swma --> Symmetric Weighted Moving Average (SWMA)
t3 --> Tim Tillson's T3 Moving Average (T3)
tema --> Triple Exponential Moving Average (TEMA)
trima --> Triangular Moving Average (TRIMA)
vidya --> Variable Index Dynamic Average (VIDYA)
vwap --> Volume Weighted Average Price (VWAP)
vwma --> Volume Weighted Moving Average (VWMA)
wma --> Weighted Moving Average (WMA)
zlma --> Zero Lag Moving Average (ZLMA)
entropy --> Entropy (ENTP)
kurtosis --> Rolling Kurtosis
skew --> Rolling Skew
xev --> Condition all
zscore --> Rolling Z Score
adx --> Average Directional Movement (ADX)
aroon --> Aroon & Aroon Oscillator (AROON)
chop --> Choppiness Index (CHOP)
xex --> Condition any
cksp --> Chande Kroll Stop (CKSP)
dpo --> Detrend Price Oscillator (DPO)
long_run --> Long Run
psar --> Parabolic Stop and Reverse (psar)
short_run --> Short Run
vhf --> Vertical Horizontal Filter (VHF)
vortex --> Vortex
accbands --> Acceleration Bands (ACCBANDS)
atr --> Average True Range (ATR)
bbands --> Bollinger Bands (BBANDS)
donchian --> Donchian Channels (DC)
kc --> Keltner Channels (KC)
massi --> Mass Index (MASSI)
natr --> Normalized Average True Range (NATR)
pdist --> Price Distance (PDIST)
rvi --> Relative Volatility Index (RVI)
thermo --> Elders Thermometer (THERMO)
ui --> Ulcer Index (UI)
ad --> Accumulation/Distribution (AD)
cmf --> Chaikin Money Flow (CMF)
efi --> Elder's Force Index (EFI)
ecm --> Ease of Movement (EOM)
kvo --> Klinger Volume Oscillator (KVO)
mfi --> Money Flow Index (MFI)
nvi --> Negative Volume Index (NVI)
obv --> On Balance Volume (OBV)
pvi --> Positive Volume Index (PVI)
dvdi --> Dual Volume Divergence Index (DVDI)
xhh --> Dynamic rolling highest values
pvt --> Price-Volume Trend (PVT)
Remarks
I also incorporated func descriptions and func test script in commented mode, you can test the functino with the embedded test script and modify them as you wish.
This is a Level 3 free and open source indicator library.
Feedbacks are appreciated.
This is not the end of pandas_ta lib publication, but it is start point with pine v5 lib function and I will add more and more funcs into this lib for my own indicators.
Function Name List:
bton()
wcp()
count()
xbt()
ebsw()
ao()
apo()
xrf()
bias()
bop()
brar()
cci()
cfo()
cg()
cmo()
coppock()
cti()
dmi()
er()
eri()
fisher()
inertia()
kdj()
kst()
macd()
mom()
pgo()
ppo()
psl()
pvo()
qqe()
roc()
rsi()
rsx()
rvgi()
slope()
smi()
sqz_pro()
xfl()
stc()
stoch()
stochrsi()
trix()
tsi()
uo()
willr()
alma()
wcx()
xll()
dema()
ema()
fwma()
hilo()
hma()
hwma()
ichimoku()
jma()
kama()
linreg()
mgcd()
rma()
sinwma()
ssf()
supertrend()
xsa()
swma()
t3()
tema()
trima()
vidya()
vwap()
vwma()
wma()
zlma()
entropy()
kurtosis()
skew()
xev()
zscore()
adx()
aroon()
chop()
xex()
cksp()
dpo()
long_run()
psar()
short_run()
vhf()
vortex()
accbands()
atr()
bbands()
donchian()
kc()
massi()
natr()
pdist()
rvi()
thermo()
ui()
ad()
cmf()
efi()
ecm()
kvo()
mfi()
nvi()
obv()
pvi()
dvdi()
xhh()
pvt()
ROC PercentileRate Of Change Percentile calculates the current ROC (user defined length) as a percentile rank.
We use 2 separate arrays, one for all positive ROC values and one for all negative values within a defined lookback period. Then the current ROC value is compared to those arrays to find it's percentile ranking.
For example, a ranking of 75 means the ROC is in the 75th percentile of all POSITIVE ROC values over the lookback period.
A ranking of -80 is in the 80th percentile of all NEGATIVE ROC values over the lookback period.
Most ROC scripts use raw ROC values (or smoothed or otherwise altered), or have stochastic formula applied to them, I've not seen one that displays ROC as percentile ranking of previous positive/negative values.
What is the advantage?
Raw ROC data only gives half the picture. What we want to do is compare the ROC to previous ROC values, to give a sense of scale. Raw ROC values don't give you that context and you can only compare visually, usually limited to the number of bars you can see on your screen.
Using a percentile ranking gives us the context of current Rate of Change relative to the previous Rate of Change over a large lookback period, and not just visually but mathematically.
Why not using a long stochastic ROC? The problem with stochastics in general is that an outlier data point can ruin the data for the rest of the lookback period.
For example, imagine a huge outlier 8% ROC. The 2nd largest ROC is 4% and the 3rd largest is 2%, with all other values below this.
In this example, a stochastic ROC would display the 8% outlier as 100, the 4% as 50, the 2% as 25 and all other data would be squeezed down between 0-25.
Additionally, a value of 60 may have vastly different meaning depending on whether the lookback period contains a large outlier or not.
With a percentile ranking, that 8% outlier would still have a value of 100. But the 4% and 2% would be 99 and 98 respectively (this assumes 100 data points in the series, in reality values will usually be decimals).
This effectively flattens the curve and gives a more consistent and dependable experience, allowing you to more accurately assess the relative importance of the current ROC.
The line of circles is set at the 50 and -50 values for quick comparison.
Values > 50 represent ROC greater than 50% of previous positive ROC values.
Values < -50 represent ROC greater than 50% of previous negative ROC values.
Mazuuma Churn IndicatorThis indicator was specifically made to confirm a periode of sideways movement (churn) on Bitcoin. It can probably be used for other cryptocurrencies as well. I use it on the daily timeframe.
Yellow means "Unconfirmed".
Orange means "Partially Confirmed".
Red means "Confirmed"
The indicator is not perfect, so use your common sense.
Churn starts when at least 2 of the conditions below are met (use also your common sense):
1. ATR < MA 20 on ATR
2. Distance to EMA 200 must be ≤ 16% at “Open churn”
3. EMA 12 on RSI between 40 and 60
4. ADX < 25
The above are weighted. Meaning no 1 has most significance. The numbers can be tweaked.
Reversal coming
* The indicators above break out, especially the ATR
* Color shift of the Heikin Ashi candle on weekly timeframe
* Engulfing candle on weekly timeframe
Because of the offset of the EMA 200, the precision of the Churn predictor can be off after a VERY big spike up or down, e.g. dec 2017. After such a spike use your common sense.
Personally I use this for bot trading, i.e. turn off trend following bots when in sideways market and use grid bots or other means of trading instead.
watermarkJust for fun... watermark graphics! The steps are:
1. Choose an image, probably no more than 20x20 pixels
2. Use an image library to convert each pixel into a table cell, as shown in the script.
I used they Python "pillow" library for step 2. This library allows you to iterate over each pixel, grab the RGB value, and generate table cells. You can use the width/height attributes of each cell to size the watermark.
Be careful, because Pinescript has a maximum character limit around 60,000 or so, and this script will reach that limit quickly. You also run into some limitation on table size, I think. That's why I suggest using no more than a 20x20 image.
Pictured in this chart is a legendary trader... message me if you would like to commission your own watermark.
Ichimoku+Based on the ichimoku cloud system, this indicator gives two presets: Standard (9/26/52/26) and Crypto (20/60/120/30).
This also shows on a chart where Tenkan-Kijun cross happens and when a Kumo Twist happens.
VixFix RVol + EMAThis indicator plots Realised Volatility (measured using VixFix method) against its long-term exponential moving average.
RVol breaking above its EMA = Sell signal
RVol breaking below its EMA = Buy signal
60-day VixFix look back period and 900 day EMA work well for lower volatility tickers (equity ETFs, megacap stocks). Higher volatility tickers could benefit from shorter look back period and EMA.
Sentiment Estimator [AstrideUnicorn]Sentiment Estimator is an indicator that estimates market sentiment using only its pricing data. It counts bullish and bearish candles in a rolling window and calculates their relative values as percentages of the total amount of candles in the window. Market sentiment shows the direction in which the market is biased to move or the current trend direction. Extreme values of the market sentiment are contrarian signals. When the market sentiment is too bullish, it is time to sell and vice versa.
HOW TO USE
Sentiment Estimator plots a pair of green and red circles for each candle. They represent bullish and bearish sentiments, respectively.
The vertical positions of the circles show corresponding sentiment values in percentage units. For example, if a green circle's height is 60, the market is 60% bullish. In this case, the red circle's height will be 40, as bullish and bearish parts of the market sentiment sum to 100%.
The blue line plotted at the 50% level shows the neutral sentiment level. If a green circle is above the blue line, the prevailing market sentiment at that time is bullish, and the market is biased to move up. If a red one is above, the market has predominantly bearish sentiment and is prone to move down.
The red level shows extreme sentiment level. If a green or red circle is above this line, it means that the market is extremely bullish or bearish, respectively. It is a contrarian signal, and one can expect a reversal soon. In this case, a blue label with the text "reversal expected" is shown.
SETTINGS
Timeframe - allows choosing a timeframe other than the chart's one for the indicator calculation.
Look-Back Window - sets the historical window length used to perform the calculations. You can adjust the window to get the best results for a particular market or timeframe.
EMA TrendSurfer - RamRapoluThis is a TrendSurfer.
Do a Top Down Approach/Analysis.
TimeFrames :
1) Daily and 4H for Identifying Trend.
2) 1H for Entries
Rules of Entry
1) Identify All EMA are Spawning Parallelly and not Crossing on Daily and then 4H.
if Point 1 is true, then
2) Identify if the EMA are spawing well like in point1.
3) Wait for Candle breaking into 21 EMA.
4) once it breaks 21EMA and does not Touch 60EMA
then
1) if its uptrend/Long position
Entry:
Your Recent High + 21 ATR = Buy Stop Order
Stop Loss (SL) : your 60 EMA - 21 ATR
Target Profit(TP) :
TP1 : 1x SL, Sell 50% then move SL to 60EMA when TP1 hits
TP2 : 2x SL, Sell 50% then move SL to EMA when TP2 hits
TP3 : 3x SL, Sell 50% then move SL to EMA when TP3 hits
Rebalance as a Bear/Bull indicatorCheck if the current market has a Bear tendency or a Bull tendency.
Bear areas are marked as red squares going down from 0.
Bull areas are marked as green squares going up from 0.
Buying/Selling windows of opportunity
On top of the Bear/Bull squares, this indicator tries to show you the windows where to look for good buying/selling opportunities.
These are marked as full columns:
Blue columns represent a window to look out for good buying opportunities
Pink columns represent a window to look out for good selling opportunities
How is this possible?
This is an indicator of a simple idea to check if the market has a Bear or Bull tendency:
1. Start with a virtual portfolio of 60/40 tokens per fiat.
2. Rebalance it when its ratio oscillates by a given % (first input)
3. Count the number of times the rebalancer buys, and sells
4. When the number of buys is greater than the number of sells => the market is going down
5. When the number of sells is greater than the number of buys => the market is going up
This is shown as the "Bear/Bull Strength" squares (red when bear, green when bull)
An extra rebalancer is also kept that works at each bar (regardless of the input %).
This is used to calculate an amount of tokens beying sold/bought and used as a "market force" coefficient.
Another extra: based on both the bear/bull strengh and market force an attempt is made to
provide good buying/selling windows of analysis.
The blue background is a buying opportunity, the red background is a sell opportunity.
In a bear market sales are delayed, and in a bull market buys are delayed.
MAROC Fast/SlowNot sure if a similar indicator already exist, so I created my own. After creating this indicator, I realize it looks very similar to MACD. However, it strictly uses Hull moving average in its calculation for the lines.
MAROC is simply Moving Average Rate of Change. This is a trend-following indicator that calculates the rate of change on two Hull moving averages. By default it calculates the ROC on 60-period HMA (green and red) and 180-period HMA (blue and orange). The zero line represents the confirmation of change in trend. Above zero is up trend and below zero is down trend. Note the difference between the "trend reversal" and the "confirmation of a trend". I like to define trend reversal by the change in direction
The colored squares on the zero line has 4 colors that represents the overall trend. Here I include the slowdown of MAROC as the start of a trend.
- bright green = when both the slow and fast MA are trending up
- faded green = when slow MA trending up, but fast MA trending down
- faded red = when slow MA trending down, but fast MA trending up
- bright red = when both the slow MA and fast MA are trending down
Trend changes triangles are shown to signal the change in trend direction (trend reversal). Green and blue triangles are trend reversal to the upside. Red and orange triangles are trend reversal to the downside.
This indicator includes the option of displaying buy(long) and sell(short) signals that follows these rules. Use at your own discretion, as it may not apply well with your market or ticker.
- Long = Bright green square and either fast or slow MAROC changes trend direction to the upside
- Short = Bright red square and either fast or slow MAROC changes trend direction to the downside
Enjoy~! Please let me know if you find this useful and which market / ticker and timeframe you are using it on~ :)
Bollinger Band Breakout Positional Strategy- BN -15M This strategy consists of following criteria:
Buy:
1. Candle should have RSI is above 60 and Close above Bollinger band upper limit
2. Exit When candle is closed below 20MA
Sell:
1. Candle should have RSI is above 40 and Close below Bollinger band lower limit
2. Exit When candle is closed above 20MA
Checkout results.
Baekdoo compressed multi EMA box and its crossover indicatorHi forks,
I'm trader Baekdoosan who trading Equity from South Korea. This Baekdoo compressed multi EMA box and its crossover indicator tells us good trading time for swing trading.
Here is the idea. As you can see formula, I put ema of 5 days to 100 days.
and draw box when all disparity of the EMAs are less than 5%
I put those value in input variable as 105 (100 means same as max/min disparity ratio, 105 means max is 5% greater than min). This can be used 110 (10% of box) based on your needs.
Once box are drew, I put indicator when it crossover the box with 5 times larger than 60 days' highest volume. Then I put triangle indicator. This will be good trading point for short-mid term trading. you can check historical chart to evaluate this.
Hope this will help your trading on equity as well as crypto. I didn't try it on futures . Best of luck all of you. Gazua~!
alerts++- Add up to 20 simple alerts per instance
- Each alert requires input of ticker, timeframe, over/under/either, target price
i.e. 'KUCOIN:BNB/USD', '60', 'over', '535'
- Each alert fires once per bar, so choose your timeframe wisely.
- Timeframe options: www.tradingcode.net
Caveats:
- You must manually set the alert group by clicking "add alert" and then selecting name of script, "alert++"
- If you make changes to the settings inputs, you have to delete the previous alert and add a new alert for the changes to take effect. That is, tradingview only "remembers" the state of your chart and settings at the time you set the alert (group).
TimeframeToMinutesLibrary "TimeframeToMinutes"
The timeframeToMinutes() function returns the number of minutes in an arbitrary timeframe string.
timeframeToMinutes()
Returns the number of minutes in the supplied timeframe string, which is arbitrary, i.e. it doesn't have to be the timeframe of the current chart but can be taken from an input.
The sole advantage over the short and neat Pinecoders f_resInMinutes function from their excellent MTF Selection Framework (at ) is that this one doesn't use up a security() call.
To convert the other way, from minutes to timeframe.period format, I would use the f_resFromMinutes function from the Pinecoders' MTF Selection Framework, which does not use security().
ERROR-CHECKING: It has light error-checking to try to make sure the string is in the format timeframe.period, e.g. 15S, 1 (minute), 60 (1H), 1D, 1W, 1M.
It will throw an error for some non-standard timeframes such as 30 hours (1800 minutes). Above 1440 minutes, only whole numbers of days are allowed. This is to be consistent with the security() function.
But it will allow some non-standard timeframes such as 7 hours (420 minutes). Such timeframes must still be supplied in the standard timeframe.period format.
param _tf
The timeframe to convert to minutes. Must be in timeframe.period format.
returns
An integer representing the number of minutes that the timeframe period is equivalent to.
ColorExtensionLibrary "ColorExtension"
Color Extension methods.
hsl(hue, saturation, lightness, transparency) HSL color transform.
Parameters:
hue : float, hue color component, hue is a degree on the color wheel from 0 to 360. 0 is red, 120 is green, 240 is blue.
saturation : float, saturation color component, saturation is a percentage value, 0 means a shade of gray and 100 is the full color.
lightness : float, lightness color component, Lightness is also a percentage; 0 is black, 100 is white.
transparency : float, transparency color component, transparency is also a percentage; 0 is opaque, 100 is transparent.
Returns: color
rgb_to_hsl(red, green, blue) Convert RGB to HSL color values
Parameters:
red : float, red color component.
green : float, green color component.
blue : float, blue color component.
Returns: tuple with 3 float values, hue, saturation and lightness.
complement(primary) Complementary of selected color
Parameters:
primary : color, the primary
Returns: color.
invert(primary) Inverts selected color.
Parameters:
primary : color, the primary.
Returns: color.
is_cool(base) Color is cool or warm.
Parameters:
base : color, the color to check.
Returns: bool.
temperature(base) Color temperature.
Parameters:
base : color, the color to check.
Returns: bool.
is_high_key(base) Color is high key (orange yellow green).
Parameters:
base : color, the color to check.
Returns: bool.
mix(base, mix, rate) Mix two colors together.
Parameters:
base : color, the base color.
mix : color, the color to mix.
rate : float, default=0.5, the rate of mixture, range within 0.0 and 1.0.
Returns: color.
analog(primary) Selects 2 near spectrum colors (H +/- 45).
Parameters:
primary : color, the base color.
Returns: tuple with 2 colors.
triadic(primary) Selects 2 far spectrum colors (H +/- 120).
Parameters:
primary : color, the base color.
Returns: tuple with 2 colors.
tetradic(primary) Uses primary and the complementary color, + 60º to form a rectangular pattern on the color wheel.
Parameters:
primary : color, the base color.
Returns: tuple with 3 colors.
square(primary) Uses primary and generate 3 equally spaced (90º) colors.
Parameters:
primary : color, the base color.
Returns: tuple with 3 colors.
Multi timeframes RSI Screener & indicator by noop42Since my previous x4 multi timeframes Stochastic RSI script seems to have been appreciated, I decided to make a 2nd version of this tool which focuses on the RSI indicator only.
Default parameters
RSI length : 14
Timeframes: 5, 15, 60, 240
OB/OS zones : 70 & 30
Repaint mode: enabled
Display lines: enabled
Display screener: enabled
Convergence warnings: timeframes 1, 2 & 3
Details
Repaint mode : Disabling it makes the indicator wait for the current candle to close before to change its value
Display lines: Allows you to disable RSI lines drawings, in order to move the screener on your main chart for example.
Display screener: Allows you to disable the screener, in order to use RSI lines only
OB/OS convergences warnings : Allows you to select which timeframe(s) must be taken into consideration for convergence signals (Selected timeframes can be distinguished in the screener, followed by a * char in the timeframes column)
Note The Stochastic RSI version of this tool is available here