+ Donchian ChannelsThis version of Donchian Channels uses two source options so that one can create a channel using highs and lows rather than one or the other or closes. My thinking was that this would create a more accurate portrayal of price action (or at least contain the greatest scope of it) as seen through the lens of a Donchian Channel. This was actually part of the genesis of my idea around my Ultimate Moving Average.
Besides the single top and bottom plot for the DC's extremities, I've enabled the ability to create outer bands with a variable width that the user can adjust to their preference. I think it's quite nice. I use it in the DC in my other non-overlay indicators.
Besides this additional functionality, the indicator has options to plot lines between the basis and the upper and lower bands, so, basically, splitting the upper and lower channel in half.
There is no magic number to the lookback. I chose 233 as default because it's a fibonacci sequence number and I'm more interested in using the DC like a very long period bias indicator, and the longer lookback gives a much wider window (because highs and lows are so spread apart) with which other faster indicators (supertrend, shorter period moving averages, etc.) can work without making the screen a clutter.
The color of the basis may also be made relevant to higher timeframe information. What I mean by this is that you can set it so that the basis of the current timeframe is colored based on the candle close of the higher timeframe of your choosing. If you're looking at an hourly chart, and you set the color to Daily, the basis will be colored based on the candle close (above or below the basis) of the previous day. If the previous daily close was above the basis, that positive color will be reflected in the basis, even if the current hourly candle closes are below the hourly basis. This could potentially be useful for setting a higher timeframe directional bias and reacting off price crossing the lower timeframe basis (or whatever your trigger for entering a trade might be). This is also optional in my Ultimate Moving Average indicator.
You can also set the entire indicator to whatever time frame you want if you want to see where the actual basis, or other levels are on that higher timeframe.
Further additions include fibonacci retracement levels. These are calculated off the high and the low of the Donchian Channels themselves.
You will see that there are only three retracement levels (.786, .705, .382), one of which is not a fib level, but what some people call the 'OTE,' or optimal trade entry. If you want more info on the OTE just web search it. So, why no .618 or .236? Reason being that the .618 overlaps the .382, and the .236 is extremely close to the .786. This sounds confusing, but the retracement levels I'm using are derived from the high and low, so it was unnecessary to have all five levels from each. I could have just calculated from the high, or just from the low, and used all the levels, but I chose to just calculate three levels from the high and three from the low because that gives a sort of mirror image balance, and that appeals to me, and the utility of the indicator is the same.
The plot lines are all colored, and I've filled certain zones between them. There is a center zone filled between both .382 levels, and an upper and lower zone filled between the .786 and either the high or the low.
If you like the colored zones, but don't like the plots because they cause screen compression, turn off the plots under the "style" tab.
There are alerts for candle closes across every line.
I should state that, regarding the fibs, obviously the length of the Channels is going to affect to what levels price retraces to. A shorter lookback means you will see more changes in highs and lows, and therefore retraces are often going to be full retraces within the bands unless price is trending hard. A longer lookback means you will see smaller retraces. Using this in conjunction with key high timeframe levels and/or a moving average can give great confidence in a trade entry. Additionally, if you have a short bias it may help in finding levels or entering a trade on a pullback. It could also be good for trade targets. But again, the lookback you choose for this indicator is going to dictate its use in the system you're building or already have. A 9 EMA and a 200 EMA, while fundamentally the same, are going to be used somewhat differently while doing your chart analysis.
Additional images below.
Same image as main, but with supertrend and my +UMA to help with chart analysis.
Image with the fib stuff turned on.
Zoomed out image with the same.
Shorter lookback period.
Zoomed in image of shorter lookback.
ابحث في النصوص البرمجية عن "supertrend"
Realtime 5D Profile [LucF]█ OVERVIEW
This indicator displays a realtime profile that can be configured to visualize five dimensions: volume, price, time, activity and age. For each price level in a bar or timeframe, you can display total or delta volume or ticks. The tick count measures activity on a level. The thickness of each level's line indicates its age, which helps you identify the most recent levels.
█ WARNING
The indicator only works in real time. Contrary to TradingView's line of volume profile indicators , it does not show anything on historical bars or closed markets, and it cannot display volume information if none exists for the data feed the chart is using. A realtime indicator such as this one only displays information accumulated while it is running on a chart. The information it calculates cannot be saved on charts, nor can it be recalculated from historical bars. If you refresh the chart, or the script must re-execute for some reason, as when you change inputs, the accumulated information will be lost.
Because "Realtime 5D Profile" requires time to accumulate information on the chart, it will be most useful to traders working on small timeframes who trade only one instrument and do not frequently change their chart's symbol or timeframe. Traders working on higher timeframes or constantly changing charts will be better served by TradingView's volume profiles. Before using this indicator, please see the "Limitations" section further down for other important information.
█ HOW TO USE IT
Load the indicator on an active chart (see here if you don't know how).
The default configuration displays:
• A double-sided volume profile showing at what price levels activity has occurred.
• The left side shows "down" volume, the right side shows "up" volume.
• The value corresponding to each level is displayed.
• The width of lines reflects their relative value.
• The thickness of lines reflects their age. Four thicknesses are used, with the thicker lines being the most recent.
• The total value of down/up values for the profile appears at the top.
To understand how to use profiles in your trading, please research the subject. Searches on "volume profile" or "market profile" will yield many useful results. I provide you with tools — I do not teach trading. To understand more about this indicator, read on. If you choose not to do so, please don't ask me to answer questions that are already answered here, nor to make videos; I don't.
█ CONCEPTS
Delta calculations
Volume is slotted in up or down slots depending on whether the price of each new chart update is higher or lower than the previous update's price. When price does not move between chart updates, the last known direction is used. In a perfect world, Pine scripts would have access to bid and ask levels, as this would allow us to know for sure if market orders are being filled on upticks (at the ask) or downticks (at the bid). Comparing the price of successive chart updates provides the most precise way to calculate volume delta on TradingView, but it is still a compromise. Order books are in constant movement; in some cases, order cancellations can cause sudden movements of both the bid and ask levels such that the next chart update can occur on an uptick at a lower price than the previous one (or vice versa). While this update's volume should be slotted in the up slot because a buy market order was filled, it will erroneously be slotted in the down slot because the price of the chart's update is lower than that of the previous one. Luckily, these conditions are relatively rare, so they should not adversely affect calculations.
Levels
A profile is a tool that displays information organized by price levels. You can select the maximum quantity of levels this indicator displays by using the script's "Levels" input. If the profile's height is small enough for level increments to be less than the symbol's tick size, a smaller quantity of levels is used until the profile's height grows sufficiently to allow your specified quantity of levels to be displayed. The exact position of levels is not tethered to the symbol's tick increments. Activity for one level is that which happens on either side of the level, halfway between its higher or lower levels. The lowest/highest levels in the profile thus appear higher/lower than the profile's low/high limits, which are determined by the lowest/highest points reached by price during the profile's life.
Level Values and Length
The profile's vertical structure is dynamic. As the profile's height changes with the price range, it is rebalanced and the price points of its levels may be recalculated. When this happens, past updates will be redistributed among the new profile's levels, and the level values may thus change. The new levels where updates are slotted will of course always be near past ones, but keep this fluidity in mind when watching level values evolve.
The profile's horizontal structure is also dynamic. The maximum length of level lines is controlled by the "Maximum line length" input value. This maximum length is always used for the largest level value in the profile, and the length of other levels is determined by their value relative to that maximum.
Updates vs Ticks
Strictly speaking, a tick is the record of a transaction between two parties. On TradingView, these are detected on seconds charts. On other charts, ticks are aggregated to form a chart update . I use the broader "update" term when it names both events. Note that, confusingly, tick is also used to name an instrument's minimal price increment.
Volume Quality
If you use volume, it's important to understand its nature and quality, as it varies with sectors and instruments. My Volume X-ray indicator is one way you can appraise the quality of an instrument's intraday volume.
█ FEATURES
Double-Sided Profiles
When you choose one of the first two configuration selections in the "Configuration" field's dropdown menu, you are asking the indicator to display a double-sided profile, i.e., where the down values appear on the left and the up ones on the right. In this mode, the formatting options in the top section of inputs apply to both sides of the profile.
Single-Sided Profiles
The six other selections down the "Configuration" field's dropdown menu select single-sided profiles, where one side aggregates the up/down values for either volume or ticks. In this mode, the formatting options in the top section of inputs apply to the left profile. The ones in the following "Right format" section apply to the right profile.
Calculation Mode
The "Calculation" input field allows the selection of one of two modes which applies to single-sided profiles only. Values can represent the simple total of volume or ticks at each level, or their delta. The mode has no effect when a double-sided profile is used because then, the total is represented by the sum of the left and right sides. Note that when totals are selected, all levels appear in the up color.
Age
The age of each level is always displayed as one of four line thicknesses. Thicker lines are used for the youngest levels. The age of levels is determined by averaging the times of the updates composing that level. When viewing double-sided profiles, the age of each side is calculated independently, which entails you can have a down level on the left side of the profile appear thinner than its corresponding up side level line on the right side because the updates composing the up side are more recent. When calculating the age of single-sided profiles, the age of the up/down values aggregated to calculate the side are averaged. Since they may be different, the averaged level ages will not be as responsive as when using a double-sided profile configuration, where the age of levels on each side is calculated independently and follows price action more closely. Moreover, when displaying two single-sided profiles (volume on one side and ticks on the other), the age of both sides will match because they are calculated from the same realtime updates.
Profile Resets
The profile can reset on timeframes or trend changes. The usual timeframe selections are available, including the chart's, in which case the profile will reset on each new chart bar. One of two trend detection logics can be used: Supertrend or the one used by LazyBear in his Weis Wave indicator . Settings for the trend logics are in the bottommost section of the inputs, where you can also control the display of trend changes and states. Note that the "Timeframe" field's setting also applies to the trend detection mechanism. Whatever the timeframe used for trend detection, its logic will not repaint.
Format
Formatting a profile for charts is often a challenge for traders, and this one is no exception. Varying zoom factors on your chart and the frequency of profile resets will require different profile formats. You can achieve a reasonable variety of effects by playing with the following input fields:
• "Resets on" controls how frequently new profiles are drawn. Spacing out profiles between bars can help make them more usable.
• "Levels" determines the maximum quantity of levels displayed.
• "Offset" allows you to shift the profile horizontally.
• "Profile size" affects the global size of the profile.
• Another "Size" field provides control over the size of the totals displayed above the profile.
• "Maximum line length" controls how far away from the center of the bar the lines will stretch left and right.
Colors
The color and brightness of levels and totals always allows you to determine the winning side between up and down values. On double-sided profiles, each side is always of one color, since the left side is down values and the right side, up values. However, the losing side is colored with half its brightness, so the emphasis is put on the winning side. When there is no winner, the toned-down version of each color is used for both sides. Single-sided profiles use the up and down colors in full brightness on the same side. Which one is used reflects the winning side.
Candles
The indicator can color candle bodies and borders independently. If you choose to do so, you may want to disable the chart's bars by using the eye icon near the symbol's name.
Tooltips
A tooltip showing the value of each level is available. If they do not appear when hovering over levels, select the indicator by clicking on its chart name. This should get the tooltips working.
Data Window
As usual, I provide key values in the Data Window, so you can track them. If you compare total realtime volumes for the profile and the built-in "Volume" indicator, you may see variations at some points. They are due to the different mechanisms running each program. In my experience, the values from the built-in don't always update as often as those of the profile, but they eventually catch up.
█ LIMITATIONS
• The levels do not appear exactly at the position they are calculated. They are positioned slightly lower than their actual price levels.
• Drawing a 20-level double-sided profile with totals requires 42 labels. The script will only display the last 500 labels,
so the number of levels you choose affects how many past profiles will remain visible.
• The script is quite taxing, which will sometimes make the chart's tab less responsive.
• When you first load the indicator on a chart, it will begin calculating from that moment; it will not take into account prior chart activity.
• If you let the script run long enough when using profile reset criteria that make profiles last for a long time, the script will eventually run out of memory,
as it will be tracking unmanageable amounts of chart updates. I don't know the exact quantity of updates that will cause this,
but the script can handle upwards of 60K updates per profile, which should last 1D except on the most active markets. You can follow the number of updates in the Data Window.
• The indicator's nature makes it more useful at very small timeframes, typically in the sub 15min realm.
• The Weis Wave trend detection used here has nothing to do with how David Weis detects trend changes.
LazyBear's version was a port of a port, so we are a few generations removed from the Weis technique, which uses reversals by a price unit.
I believe the version used here is useful nonetheless because it complements Supertrend rather well.
█ NOTES
The aggregated view that volume and tick profiles calculate for traders is a good example of one of the most useful things software can do for traders: look at things from a methodical, mathematical perspective, and present results in a meaningful way. Profiles are powerful because, if the volume data they use is of good enough quality, they tell us what levels are important for traders, regardless of the nature or rationality of the methods traders have used to determine those levels. Profiles don't care whether traders use the news, fundamentals, Fib numbers, pivots, or the phases of the moon to find "their" levels. They don't attempt to forecast or explain markets. They show us real stuff containing zero uncertainty, i.e., what HAS happened. I like this.
The indicator's "VPAA" chart name represents four of the five dimensions the indicator displays: volume, price, activity and age. The time dimension is implied by the fact it's a profile — and I couldn't find a proper place for a "T" in there )
I have not included alerts in the script. I may do so in the future.
For the moment, I have no plans to write a profile indicator that works on historical bars. TradingView's volume profiles already do that, and they run much faster than Pine versions could, so I don't see the point in spending efforts on a poor ersatz.
For Pine Coders
• The script uses labels that draw varying quantities of characters to break the limitation constraining other Pine plots/lines to bar boundaries.
• The code's structure was optimized for performance. When it was feasible, global arrays, "input" and other variables were used from functions,
sacrificing function readability and portability for speed. Code was also repeated in some places, to avoid the overhead of frequent function calls in high-traffic areas.
• I wrote my script using the revised recommendations in the Style Guide from the Pine v5 User Manual.
█ THANKS
• To Duyck for his function that sorts an array while keeping it in synch with another array.
The `sortTwoArrays()` function in my script is derived from the Pine Wizard 's code.
• To the one and only Maestro, RicardoSantos , the creative volcano who worked hard to write a function to produce fixed-width, figure space-padded numeric values.
A change in design made the function unnecessary in this script, but I am grateful to you nonetheless.
• To midtownskr8guy , another Pine Wizard who is also a wizard with colors. I use the colors from his Pine Color Magic and Chart Theme Simulator constantly.
• Finally, thanks to users of my earlier "Delta Volume" scripts. Comments and discussions with them encouraged me to persist in figuring out how to achieve what this indicator does.
Oscilator candles - momentum strategyThis is momentum based strategy based on indicators published earlier:
Also trying to use delayed supertrend based on steps as mentioned in the published indicator:
Added option to filter trade entries based on higher timeframe pivots. But, it is not so effective and may need further optimization.
super Z Ok I try to make this indicator to be a super trend based on candles MTF , need to be warned that it can repaint , I did not had time to check this issue so i post it as idea only (if such issue exist let me know )
the trendline is not repaint based on VHMA (or volume HMA ) that i posted last time
So it a cool idea to make the supertrend in this way ,but need to be tested further
signals are based on this supertrend
Easy Sys 1I just updated Easy indicator to make it little more advance
add (SAR,Zigzag,Supertrend etc)
very important that when you set the info panel make sure its in correct position , so here in btc 4 hour chart I put 10500
for other tf or assets this you need to fix by your own. so lets say you load xrp then put a number like 0.3 and try to see if it fit.
the buy and sell based on score of the indicators total
the colors are based on supertrend
so main purpose here to get much info fast on one chart before to make a move to buy or sell based on multiple indicators
ANN RSI SUPER TRENDSo I was bored and I made this Hybrid
ANN taken from
and alex super trend ,
instead of normal ATR for the supertrend I use RSI and the ANN combination
alerts included
Noro's SILA v1.2Noro's SILA v1.2 - these are 5 trend indicators in 1, for the sake of better accuracy.
Added:
1) Settings
2) Arrows
Noro's SILA v1.2 uses 5 trend indicators:
1) SuperTrend
2) DI Plus-Minus
3) WOW trend indicator (my idea)
4) BarColor indicator (my idea)
5) BestMA (or "BMA") indicator (my idea)
The user can switch-off any indicator from 5 to achieve big accuracy.
How does it work?
Each indicator from 5 defines a trend in own way. If two indicators report that there will be a uptrend, and three others the indicator report that there will be a downtrend - it is downtrend (a red background).
For an example
Now SuperTrend = uptrend = +1
Now DI Plus-Minus = downtrend = -1
Now WOW trend indicator = downtrend = -1
Now BarColor indicator = downtrend = -1
Now BestMA (or "BMA") indicator = uptrend = +1
Sum = + 1 - 1 - 1 - 1 + 1 = -1 = downtrend
If sum > 0 = uptrend
Sensivity
The user himself chooses what there will be a sensitivity (in settings).
If sensivity = 3:
sum > or = 3 - uptrend
sum < or = -3 - downtrend
sum > -3 and < 3 - NA-color of background
Trendlines
3 lower trendlines (blue plots) is "sum+3"
5 upper trendlines is "sum-5"
etc
Settings:
1) sensivity - you see above
2) distance - distance between the price and lines (for convenience)
BTST Trade - 3:15 PMOverview
This indicator is specifically designed for BTST (Buy Today, Sell Tomorrow) traders who want a clear directional signal at 3:15 PM, just before the market closes.
It identifies the active market trend and instantly shows whether the market is positioned for a BTST BUY or BTST SELL setup.
Its goal is simple — help you take a data-based end-of-day decision rather than relying on guesswork or emotion.
Detects the current market trend throughout the day.
At exactly 3:15 PM, it checks that trend and prints one clear signal:
🟢 BTST BUY → Trend is bullish.
🔴 BTST SELL → Trend is bearish.
The signal appears as a label on the chart, making it easy to spot and understand.
Only one signal per day, ensuring clarity and discipline.
How to Use
Apply the indicator on an intraday timeframe (recommended 5-min or 15-min).
Make sure your chart’s exchange timezone is set correctly (for NSE / BSE, use India Standard Time).
Observe the signal generated at 3:15 PM:
If you get a green BUY label, plan a BTST long trade for the next session.
If you get a red SELL label, consider a short-side opportunity or avoid longs.
Use it together with your own price-action or volume confirmation before entering a trade.
Best Practices
Works best on liquid stocks/indices where volume is strong near close.
Combine with Supertrend, EMA, or RSI for additional confirmation.
Avoid using on higher timeframes like 1 hour or daily (no 3:15 bar there).
Designed mainly for BTST and short-term traders.
Disclaimer
This indicator is created for educational purposes only.
It is not financial advice, and no outcome is guaranteed.
Always use proper risk management and confirm signals with your own analysis before taking any trade.
Credits
Created by Virendra Pandey
A simple, time-based approach to identify the BTST & STBT opportunity at 3:15 PM.
ma+ko Arrowsma+ko ARROWS is a clean Supertrend-based indicator that generates precise BUY and SELL arrows without repainting after candle close.
Lynie's V9 SELL🟢🔴 Lynie’s V8 — BUY & SELL (Mirrored, Interlocking System)
Lynie’s V8 is a paired long/short engine built as two mirrored scripts—Lynie’s V8 BUY and Lynie’s V8 SELL—that read price the same way, flip conditions symmetrically, and manage trades with the exact logic on opposite sides. Use either one standalone or run both together for full two-sided automation of entries, re-entries, caution states, and adaptive SL/TP.
✳️ What “mirrored” means here
Supertrend Tri-Stack (10/11/12):
BUY: ST10 primary pierce; ST12 fallback; “PAG Buy” when price pierces any ST while above the other two.
SELL: Exact inverse—ST10 primary pierce down; ST12 fallback; “PAG Sell” when price pierces any ST while below the other two.
Re-Enter Clusters:
BUY: Ratcheted up (Heikin-Ashi green holds/tightens).
SELL: Ratcheted down (Heikin-Ashi red holds/tightens).
Both sides use the same cluster age/decay math, care penalties, session awareness, and fast-candle tightening.
Care Flags (context risk):
Ichimoku, MACD, RSI combine into single and paired flags that tighten or widen offsets on both sides with the same scoring.
VWAP–EMA50 (5m) cluster gate:
Identical distance checks for BUY/SELL. When the mean cluster is present, offsets and labels adapt (tighter/“riskier scalp” messaging).
Golden Pocket A/B/C (prev-day):
Same fib boxes & labeling (gold tone) on both sides to call out TP-friendly zones.
SL/TP Envelope:
Shared dynamic engine: per-bar decay, fast-candle expansion, and care-based compress/relax—all mirrored for up/down.
Caution Labels:
BUY side prints CAUTION SELL if HA flips red inside an active long cluster.
SELL side prints CAUTION BUY if HA flips green inside an active short cluster.
Same latching & auto-release behavior.
🧠 Core workflow (both sides)
Primary trigger via ST10 pierce (structure shift) with an ST12 fallback when ST10 didn’t qualify.
PAG Mode when price is already on the right side of the other two STs—strongest conviction.
Cluster phase begins after a signal: ratcheted re-entry level, session-aware offsets, dynamic tightening on fast bars.
Care system shapes every re-entry & SL/TP label (Ichi/MACD/RSI combos + VWAP/EMA gate + QQE).
Protective layer: SL-wick and SL-body logic, caution flips, and “hold 1 bar” cluster carry after SL to avoid whipsaw spam.
🔎 Labels & messages (shared vocabulary)
Lynie’s / Lynie’s+ / Lynie’s++ — strength tiers (ST12 involvement & clean context).
Re-Enter / Excellent Re-Enter — cluster pullback quality; ratchet shows the “must-hold” zone.
SL&TP (n) — live offset multiplier the engine is using right now.
CAUTION BUY / CAUTION SELL — HA flip against the active side inside the cluster.
Restart Next Candle — visual cue to re-arm after a confirmed signal bar.
⚡ Why run both together
Continuity: When a long cycle ends (SL or caution degradation), the SELL engine is already tracking the inverse without re-tuning.
Symmetry: Same math, same signals, opposite direction—no hidden biases.
Coverage: Trend hand-offs are cleaner; you don’t miss early shorts after a long fade (and vice versa).
🔧 Recommended usage
Intraday futures (ES/NQ) or any liquid market.
Keep the VWAP–EMA cluster ON; it filters FOMO chases.
Honor Caution flips inside cluster—scale down or wait for the next clean re-enter.
Treat Golden Zones as TP magnets, not guaranteed reversals.
📌 Notes
Both scripts are Pine v6 and independent. Load BUY and SELL together for the full experience.
All offsets (re-enter & SL/TP) are visible in labels—so you always know why a zone is where it is.
Alerts are provided for signals, re-enter hits, caution, and SL events on both sides.
Summary: Lynie’s V8 BUY & SELL are vice-versa twins—one framework, two directions—delivering consistent entries, adaptive re-entries, and contextual risk management whether the market is pressing up or breaking down.
Fib OscillatorWhat is Fib Oscillator and How to Use it?
🔶 1. Conceptual Overview
The Fib Oscillator is a Fibonacci-based relative position oscillator.
Instead of measuring momentum (like RSI or MACD), it measures where price currently sits between the recent swing high and swing low, expressed as a percentage within the Fibonacci range.
In other words:
It answers: “Where is price right now within its most recent dynamic range?”
It visualizes retracement and extension zones numerically, providing continuous feedback between 0% and 100% (and beyond if extended).
🔶 2. What the Script Does
The indicator:
Automatically detects recent high and low levels using an adaptive lookback window, which depends on ATR volatility.
Calculates the current price’s position between those levels as a percentage (0–100).
Plots that percentage as an oscillator — showing visually whether price is near the top, middle, or bottom of its recent range.
Overlays Fibonacci retracement levels (23.6%, 38.2%, 50%, 61.8%, 78.6%) as reference zones.
Generates alerts when the oscillator crosses key Fib thresholds — which can signal retracement completion, breakout potential, or pullback exhaustion.
🔶 3. Technical Flow Breakdown
(a) Inputs
Input Description Default Notes
atrLength ATR period used for volatility estimation 14 Used to dynamically tune lookback sensitivity
minLookback Minimum lookback window (candles) 20 Ensures stability even in low volatility
maxLookback Maximum lookback window 100 Limits over-expansion during high volatility
isInverse Inverts chart orientation false Useful for inverse markets (e.g. shorts or inverse BTC view)
(b) Volatility-Adaptive Lookback
Instead of using a fixed lookback, it calculates:
lookback
=
SMA(ATR,10)
/
SMA(Close,10)
×
500
lookback=SMA(ATR,10)/SMA(Close,10)×500
Then it clamps this between minLookback and maxLookback.
This makes the oscillator:
More reactive during high volatility (shorter lookback)
More stable during calm markets (longer lookback)
Essentially, it self-adjusts to market rhythm — you don’t have to constantly tweak lookback manually.
(c) High-Low Reference Points
It takes the highest and lowest points within the dynamic lookback window.
If isInverse = true, it flips the candle logic (useful if viewing inverse instruments like stablecoin pairs or when analyzing bearish setups invertedly).
(d) Oscillator Core
The main oscillator line:
osc
=
(
close
−
low
)
(
high
−
low
)
×
100
osc=
(high−low)
(close−low)
×100
0% = Price is at the lookback low.
100% = Price is at the lookback high.
50% = Midpoint (balanced).
Between Fibonacci percentages (23.6%, 38.2%, 61.8%, etc.), the oscillator indicates retracement stages.
(e) Fibonacci Levels as Reference
It overlays horizontal reference lines at:
0%, 23.6%, 38.2%, 50%, 61.8%, 78.6%, 100%
These act as support/resistance bands in oscillator space.
You can read it similar to how traders use Fibonacci retracements on charts, but compressed into a single line oscillator.
(f) Alerts
The script includes built-in alert conditions for crossovers at each major Fibonacci level.
You can set TradingView alerts such as:
“Oscillator crossed above 61.8%” → possible bullish continuation or breakout.
“Oscillator crossed below 38.2%” → possible pullback or correction starting.
This allows automated monitoring of fib retracement completions without manually drawing fib levels.
🔶 4. How to Use It
🔸 Visual Interpretation
Oscillator Value Zone Market Context
0–23.6% Deep Retracement Potential exhaustion of a down-move / early reversal
23.6–38.2% Shallow retracement zone Possible continuation phase
38.2–50% Mid retracement Neutral or indecisive structure
50–61.8% Key pivot region Common trend resumption zone
61.8–78.6% Late retracement Often “last pullback” area
78.6–100% Near high range Possible overextension / profit-taking
>100% Range breakout New leg formation / expansion
🔸 Practical Application Steps
Load the indicator on your chart (set overlay = false, so it’s below the main price chart).
Observe oscillator position relative to fib bands:
Use it to determine retracement depth.
Combine with structure tools:
Trend lines, swing points, or HTF market structure.
Use crossovers for timing:
Crossing above 61.8% in an uptrend often confirms breakout continuation.
Crossing below 38.2% in a downtrend signals renewed downside momentum.
For range markets, oscillator swings between 23.6% and 78.6% can define accumulation/distribution boundaries.
🔶 5. When to Use It
During Retracements: To gauge how deep the pullback has gone.
During Range Markets: To identify relative overbought/oversold positions.
Before Breakouts: Crossovers of 61.8% or 78.6% often precede impulsive moves.
In Multi-Timeframe Contexts:
LTF (15M–1H): Detect intraday retracement exhaustion.
HTF (4H–1D): Confirm major range expansions or key reversal zones.
🔶 6. Ideal Companion Indicators
The Fib Oscillator works best when contextualized with structure, volatility, and trend bias indicators.
Below are optimal pairings:
Companion Indicator Purpose Integration Insight
Market Structure MTF Tool Identify active trend direction Use Fib Oscillator only in trend direction for cleaner signals
EMA Ribbon / Supertrend Trend confirmation Align oscillator crossovers with EMA bias
ATR Bands / Volatility Envelope Validate breakout strength If oscillator >78.6% & ATR rising → valid breakout
Volume Oscillator Confirm retracement strength Volume contraction + oscillator under 38.2% → potential reversal
HTF Fib Retracement Tool Combine LTF oscillator with HTF fib confluence Powerful multi-timeframe setups
RSI or Stochastic Measure momentum relative to position RSI divergence while oscillator near 78.6% → exhaustion clue
🔶 7. Understanding the Settings
Setting Function Practical Impact
ATR Period (14) Controls volatility sampling Higher = smoother lookback adaptation
Min Lookback (20) Smallest window allowed Lower = more reactive but noisier
Max Lookback (100) Largest window allowed Higher = smoother but slower to react
Inverse Candle Chart Flips oscillator vertically Useful when analyzing bearish or inverse scenarios (e.g. short-side fib mapping)
Recommended Configs:
For scalping/intraday: ATR 10–14, lookback 20–50
For swing/position trading: ATR 14–21, lookback 50–100
🔶 8. Example Trade Logic (Practical Use)
Scenario: Uptrend on 4H chart
Oscillator drops to below 38.2% → retracement zone
Price consolidates → oscillator stabilizes
Oscillator crosses above 50% → pullback ending
Entry: Long when oscillator crosses above 61.8%
Exit: Near 78.6–100% zone or upon divergence with RSI
For Short Bias (Inverse Setup):
Enable isInverse = true to visually flip the oscillator (so lows become highs).
Use the same thresholds inversely.
🔶 9. Strengths & Limitations
✅ Strengths
Dynamic, self-adapting to volatility
Quantifies Fib retracement as a continuous function
Compact oscillator view (no clutter on chart)
Works well across all timeframes
Compatible with both trending and ranging markets
⚠️ Limitations
Doesn’t define trend direction — must be used with structure filters
Can whipsaw during choppy consolidations
The “lookback auto-adjust” may lag in sudden volatility shifts
Shouldn’t be used standalone for entries without structural confluence
🔶 10. Summary
The “Fib Oscillator” is a dynamic Fibonacci-relative positioning tool that merges retracement theory with adaptive volatility logic.
It gives traders an intuitive, quantified view of where price sits within its recent fib range, allowing anticipation of pullbacks, reversals, or breakout momentum.
Think of it as a "Fibonacci RSI", but instead of momentum strength, it shows positional depth — the vibrational location of price within its natural swing cycle.
Modern Combo Crypto SuiteBlends long and short playbooks in one overlay with quick toggles.
Tracks EMA stacks, SuperTrend, WaveTrend, QQE, and volume to score bias.
Colors the chart background when watch/ready conditions align.
Fires alerts for imminent or fully aligned long/short setups.
Displays a live checklist table summarizing trend, momentum, and volume confidence.
Hyper Strength Index | QuantLapse🧠 Hyper Strength Index (HSI) | QuantLapse
Overview:
The Hyper Strength Index (HSI) is a composite momentum oscillator designed to unify multiple strength measures into a single, adaptive framework. It combines the Relative Strength Index (RSI), Chande Momentum Oscillator (CMO), Money Flow Index (MFI), and Stochastic RSI to deliver a refined, multidimensional view of market momentum and overbought/oversold conditions.
Unlike traditional oscillators that rely on a single formula, the HSI averages four distinct momentum perspectives — price velocity, directional conviction, volume participation, and stochastic behavior — offering traders a more balanced and noise-resistant reading of market strength.
⚙️ Calculation Logic:
The Hyper Strength Index is computed as the normalized average of:
📈 RSI — classic measure of relative momentum.
💪 CMO — captures directional bias and intensity of moves.
💵 MFI — integrates volume and money flow pressure.
🔄 Stochastic RSI (K-line) — identifies momentum extremes and short-term turning points.
This fusion creates a smoother, more comprehensive signal, mitigating the weaknesses of any single oscillator.
🎯 Interpretation:
Overbought Zone (Default: > 75):
Indicates potential exhaustion of bullish momentum — a cooling phase or reversal may follow.
Oversold Zone (Default: < 7):
Suggests bearish exhaustion — a rebound or accumulation phase may emerge.
Neutral Zone (Between 7 and 75):
Represents balanced market conditions or trend continuation phases.
Visual cues highlight key conditions:
🔺 Red Highlights — Overbought regions or downward inflection points.
🔻 Green Highlights — Oversold regions or upward inflection points.
Neutral zones are shaded with subtle gray backgrounds for clarity.
💡 Key Features:
🔹 Multi-factor strength analysis (RSI + CMO + MFI + StochRSI).
🔹 Adaptive overbought/oversold detection.
🔹 Visual alerts via colored backgrounds and bar markers.
🔹 Customizable smoothing and length parameters for fine-tuning sensitivity.
🔹 Intuitive visualization ideal for both short-term scalping and swing trading setups.
🧭 Usage Notes:
Works best as a momentum confirmation tool — pair with trend filters like EMA, SuperTrend, or ADX.
In trending markets, use crossovers from extreme zones as potential continuation or exhaustion signals.
In ranging markets, exploit overbought/oversold reversals for high-probability mean reversion trades.
📘 Summary:
The Hyper Strength Index | QuantLapse distills multiple dimensions of market strength into a single, cohesive oscillator. By merging price, volume, and directional momentum, it provides traders with a more robust, responsive, and context-aware perspective on market dynamics — a next-generation evolution beyond the limitations of RSI or CMO alone.
ADOLFO'S NINJA TURTLE SOUPThis indicator signals when there is a turtle soup of m30 in the NY session following the trend of a supertrend indicator in a 1-hour time interval, being excellent for taking RR trades 1 to 1. Created by Engineer Adolfo Pérez Espinoza.
byquan GP - SRSI Channel🔍 What Is It?
The GP – SRSI Channel is a momentum-based oscillator that measures the relative strength of price movements across multiple timeframes using the Stochastic RSI (SRSI) method.
Instead of using a single RSI line, this indicator analyzes four price inputs and four timeframes to create a dynamic channel that reflects the true market momentum — helping traders identify overbought and oversold zones with higher accuracy.
⚙️ How It Works
The indicator combines multiple layers of analysis to produce a smooth and reliable momentum channel.
1. Multi-Source RSI Calculation
It computes RSI and Stochastic RSI values for four different price sources:
Open
High
Low
Close
Each source generates its own SRSI value:
dsopen, dshigh, dslow, and dsclose
From these, it extracts:
starraymin: the lowest (most oversold) SRSI value
starraymax: the highest (most overbought) SRSI value
This forms a momentum range based on all price inputs.
2. Multi-Timeframe (MTF) Integration
To strengthen signal reliability, it repeats this SRSI analysis across four higher timeframes (configurable by user):
Parameter Default Value Meaning
Time 1 180 minutes 3-hour chart
Time 2 360 minutes 6-hour chart
Time 3 720 minutes 12-hour chart
Time 4 1D Daily chart
Each timeframe produces its own set of minimum, maximum, and close SRSI values.
These are then combined and normalized to a 0–100 scale.
3. Normalization and Channel Plot
The combined results create three main lines:
Min Line (Green–Red gradient) → represents oversold strength
Max Line (Green–Red gradient) → represents overbought strength
Close Line (White) → represents average SRSI value
The area between the Min and Max lines is filled with a color gradient to form the SRSI Channel, visually showing momentum strength and range.
4. Signal & Alerts
Two alert levels are defined:
Alert Min Level → Default = 5 (oversold)
Alert Max Level → Default = 95 (overbought)
When:
oranmin ≤ Alert Min Level → Market is in an oversold state (potential reversal up).
oranmax ≥ Alert Max Level → Market is in an overbought state (potential reversal down).
When either of these thresholds is crossed, the indicator triggers:
A white square marker on the chart.
A custom alert with the message:
“SRSI Channel reached alert threshold (oranmax ≥ MaxLevel or oranmin ≤ MinLevel)”
🧭 How to Use It
🪄 Step 1 — Add to Chart
Copy the code into a new Pine Script in TradingView.
Click Add to chart.
You’ll see three lines and a colored channel between them.
⚙️ Step 2 — Adjust Inputs
Core SRSI Settings
Setting Description
K, D Smoothing factors for Stochastic RSI.
RSI Length Number of bars for RSI calculation.
S Length Period used for %K in Stochastic RSI.
Alert Min/Max Level Defines oversold/overbought zones.
Multi-Timeframe Settings
Change Time 1 to Time 4 to suit your trading style:
Shorter timeframes → faster but more noise.
Longer timeframes → smoother, more reliable momentum.
📈 Step 3 — Interpret the Chart
Indicator Element Meaning
🟩 Lower Boundary (Min) Lowest SRSI reading → momentum weakness / possible rebound area
🟥 Upper Boundary (Max) Highest SRSI reading → strong momentum / possible exhaustion
⚪ Middle Line (Close) Average of all SRSI readings → overall momentum strength
🌈 Channel Fill Visualizes balance between overbought and oversold levels
When the channel widens → market volatility and strength increase.
When it narrows → consolidation or low-momentum phase.
🔔 Step 4 — Alerts
You can create alerts using:
Condition: SRSI Extreme
Message: SRSI Channel reached alert threshold
Use this to receive notifications when the market hits extreme momentum levels (great for reversal traders).
💡 Trading Tips
✅ Combine with Supertrend, MACD, or Moving Averages for confirmation.
✅ Look for SRSI extremes aligning with price support/resistance for stronger reversal entries.
✅ Use different timeframe combinations (e.g., 1H–4H–12H–1D) depending on your trading style.
✅ Treat it as a momentum filter — not a direct buy/sell signal tool.
⚖️ Summary
The GP – SRSI Channel is a sophisticated multi-timeframe momentum indicator that helps traders visualize market strength and identify overbought or oversold conditions with exceptional clarity.
Features:
4 price sources × 4 timeframes = deep momentum insight
Dynamic, color-coded SRSI channel
Built-in alert system for extreme conditions
Clean and intuitive visual design
Best suited for:
Swing and position traders
Traders who use RSI/Stoch indicators
Those seeking to confirm entries with multi-timeframe momentum data
🎯 Understand the market’s true momentum — before it moves.
(RSI + CCI) × (MACD/ATR)^2⚙️ (RSI + CCI) × (MACD / ATR)² Composite — Normalized, Compressed, Dynamic Colors
This advanced composite oscillator merges three powerful momentum indicators — RSI, CCI, and MACD — into one normalized and volatility-adjusted signal that reacts smoothly across all markets.
By dividing MACD by ATR (Average True Range), the indicator self-scales for different symbols, and an optional tanh-like compression prevents extreme spikes while keeping the movement fluid and responsive.
🧩 Core Formula
(RSI + CCI) × (MACD / ATR)²
(optionally passed through a tanh compression for stability)
RSI and CCI are normalized (RSI ÷ 50, CCI ÷ 100) → roughly −2 to +2 range.
MACD is volatility-adjusted by ATR → scale-independent between assets.
The result is centered around 0 for clear bullish/bearish momentum comparison.
🎨 Visual Features
🟢🔴 Dynamic 4-Color Histogram
Positive + Rising = Strong Teal
Positive + Falling = Light Teal
Negative + Falling = Strong Red
Negative + Rising = Light Red
🟡⚫ 4-Color Smoothing Line
Positive & Rising = Bright Yellow
Positive & Falling = Soft Yellow
Negative & Rising = Grey
Negative & Falling = Dark Grey
Zero-centered layout for intuitive bullish/bearish visualization.
⚙️ Adjustable Parameters
Individual RSI, CCI, and MACD lengths and sources.
ATR length for volatility normalization.
Optional tanh-style compression with adjustable gain (to keep values in ±1 range).
Fully customizable colors and line widths for both bars and smoothing line.
🔔 Alerts
Triggered automatically when the composite crosses above or below zero, signaling potential trend reversals or momentum shifts.
💡 How to Use
Composite > 0 → Bullish momentum ↑
Composite < 0 → Bearish momentum ↓
A brightening line or bar = momentum accelerating.
A fading color = momentum weakening or reversal forming.
Combine with higher-timeframe trend filters (EMA, VWAP, Supertrend) for confirmation.
Bollinger RSI + SuperTrend TrailingBollinger Band RSI buy and sell signals with a super trend trailing stop
⚡ Elite Momentum Pro🎯 Key Features
1. Smart Signal Engine
3 Signal Modes: Aggressive, Balanced, Conservative
7-Point Scoring System - Ensures high-quality signals
Anti-Flip Protection - Prevents rapid signal changes
Multiple confirmations: Supertrend, MACD, RSI, EMA alignment, momentum
2. Advanced Risk Management
3 Take Profit Levels (TP1, TP2, TP3) for scaling out
ATR-Based Dynamic Stops - Adapts to volatility
Customizable Risk:Reward (default 2.5:1)
Visual stop and target levels
3. Clean Visual Design
Color-coded price bars based on trend strength
EMA Ribbon (9, 21, 50, 200) for trend clarity
Volume Cluster Heatmap [BackQuant]Volume Cluster Heatmap
A visualization tool that maps traded volume across price levels over a chosen lookback period. It highlights where the market builds balance through heavy participation and where it moves efficiently through low-volume zones. By combining a heatmap, volume profile, and high/low volume node detection, this indicator reveals structural areas of support, resistance, and liquidity that drive price behavior.
What Are Volume Clusters?
A volume cluster is a horizontal aggregation of traded volume at specific price levels, showing where market participants concentrated their buying and selling.
High Volume Nodes (HVN) : Price levels with significant trading activity; often act as support or resistance.
Low Volume Nodes (LVN) : Price levels with little trading activity; price moves quickly through these areas, reflecting low liquidity.
Volume clusters help identify key structural zones, reveal potential reversals, and gauge market efficiency by highlighting where the market is balanced versus areas of thin liquidity.
By creating heatmaps, profiles, and highlighting high and low volume nodes (HVNs and LVNs), it allows traders to see where the market builds balance and where it moves efficiently through thin liquidity zones.
Example: Bitcoin breaking away from the high-volume zone near 118k and moving cleanly through the low-volume pocket around 113k–115k, illustrating how markets seek efficiency:
Core Features
Visual Analysis Components:
Heatmap Display : Displays volume intensity as colored boxes, lines, or a combination for a dynamic view of market participation.
Volume Profile Overlay : Shows cumulative volume per price level along the right-hand side of the chart.
HVN & LVN Labels : Marks high and low volume nodes with color-coded lines and labels.
Customizable Colors & Transparency : Adjust high and low volume colors and minimum transparency for clear differentiation.
Session Reset & Timeframe Control : Dynamically resets clusters at the start of new sessions or chosen timeframes (intraday, daily, weekly).
Alerts
HVN / LVN Alerts : Notify when price reaches a significant high or low volume node.
High Volume Zone Alerts : Trigger when price enters the top X% of cumulative volume, signaling key areas of market interest.
How It Works
Each bar’s volume is distributed proportionally across the horizontal price levels it touches. Over the lookback period, this builds a cumulative volume profile, identifying price levels with the most and least trading activity. The highest cumulative volume levels become HVNs, while the lowest are LVNs. A side volume profile shows aggregated volume per level, and a heatmap overlay visually reinforces market structure.
Applications for Traders
Identify strong support and resistance at HVNs.
Detect areas of low liquidity where price may move quickly (LVNs).
Determine market balance zones where price may consolidate.
Filter noise: because volume clusters aggregate activity into levels, minor fluctuations and irrelevant micro-moves are removed, simplifying analysis and improving strategy development.
Combine with other indicators such as VWAP, Supertrend, or CVD for higher-probability entries and exits.
Use volume clusters to anticipate price reactions to breaking points in thin liquidity zones.
Advanced Display Options
Heatmap Styles : Boxes, lines, or both. Boxes provide a traditional heatmap, lines are better for high granularity data.
Line Mode Example : Simplified line visualization for easier reading at high level counts:
Profile Width & Offset : Adjust spacing and placement of the volume profile for clarity alongside price.
Transparency Control : Lower transparency for more opaque visualization of high-volume zones.
Best Practices for Usage
Reduce the number of levels when using line mode to avoid clutter.
Use HVN and LVN markers in conjunction with volume profiles to plan entries and exits.
Apply session resets to monitor intraday vs. multi-day volume accumulation.
Combine with other technical indicators to confirm high-probability trading signals.
Watch price interactions with LVNs for potential rapid movements and with HVNs for possible support/resistance or reversals.
Technical Notes
Each bar contributes volume proportionally to the price levels it spans, creating a dynamic and accurate representation of traded interest.
Volume profiles are scaled and offset for visual clarity alongside live price.
Alerts are fully integrated for HVN/LVN interaction and high-volume zone entries.
Optimized to handle large lookback windows and numerous price levels efficiently without performance degradation.
This indicator is ideal for understanding market structure, detecting key liquidity areas, and filtering out noise to model price more accurately in high-frequency or algorithmic strategies.
Tweezer & Kangaroo Zones [WavesUnchained]Tweezer & Kangaroo Zones
Pattern Recognition with Supply/Demand Zones
Indicator that detects tweezer and kangaroo tail (pin bar) reversal patterns and creates supply and demand zones. Includes volume validation, trend context, and confluence scoring.
What You See on Your Chart
Pattern Labels:
"T" (Red) - Tweezer Top detected above price → Bearish reversal signal
"T" (Green) - Tweezer Bottom detected below price → Bullish reversal signal
"K" (Red) - Kangaroo Bear (Pin Bar rejection from top) → Bearish signal
"K" (Green) - Kangaroo Bull (Pin Bar rejection from bottom) → Bullish signal
Label Colors Indicate Pattern Strength:
Dark Green/Red - Strong pattern (score ≥8.0)
Medium Green/Red - Good pattern (score ≥6.0)
Light Green/Red - Valid pattern (score <6.0)
Zone Boxes:
Red Boxes - Supply Zones (resistance, potential short areas)
Green Boxes - Demand Zones (support, potential long areas)
White Border - Active zone (fresh, not tested yet)
Gray Border - Inactive zone (expired or invalidated)
Pattern Detection
Tweezer Patterns (Classic Double-Top/Bottom):
Flexible Lookback - Detects patterns up to 3 bars apart (not just consecutive)
Precision Matching - 0.2% level tolerance for high-quality signals
Wick Similarity Check - Both candles must show similar rejection wicks
Volume Validation - Second candle requires elevated volume (0.8x average)
Pattern Strength Score - 0-1 quality rating based on level match + wick similarity
Optional Trend Context - Can require trend alignment (default: OFF for more signals)
Kangaroo Tail / Pin Bar Patterns:
No Pivot Delay - Instant detection without waiting for pivot confirmation
Body Position Check - Body must be at candle extremes (30% tolerance)
Volume Spike - Rejection must occur with volume (0.9x average)
Rejection Strength - Scores based on wick length (0.5-0.9 of range)
Optional Trend Context - Bearish in uptrends, Bullish in downtrends (default: OFF)
Zone Management
Auto-Created Zones - Every valid pattern creates a supply/demand zone
Overlap Prevention - Zones too close together (50% overlap) are not duplicated
Lifetime Control - Zones expire after 400 bars (configurable)
Smart Invalidation - Zones invalidate when price closes through them
Styling Options - Choose between Solid, Dashed, or Dotted borders
Border Width - 2px width for better visibility
Confluence Scoring System
Multi-factor confluence scoring (0-10 scale) with configurable weights:
Regime (EMA+HTF) - Trend alignment across timeframes (Weight: 2.0)
HTF Stack - Multi-timeframe trend confluence (Weight: 3.0)
Structure - Higher lows / Lower highs confirmation (Weight: 1.0)
Relative Volume - Volume surge validation (Weight: 1.0)
Chop Advantage - Favorable market conditions (Weight: 1.0)
Zone Thinness - Tight zones = better R/R (Weight: 1.0)
Supertrend - Trend indicator alignment (Weight: 1.0)
MOST - Moving Stop alignment (Weight: 1.0)
Pattern Strength - Quality of detected pattern (Weight: 1.5)
Zone Retest Signals
Signals generated when zones are retested:
BUY Signal - Price retests demand zone from above (score ≥4.5)
SELL Signal - Price retests supply zone from below (score ≥5.5)
Normalized Score - Displayed as 0-10 for easy interpretation
Optional Trend Gate - Require trend alignment for signals (default: OFF)
Alert Ready - Built-in alertconditions for automation
Additional Features
Auto-Threshold Tuning - Adapts to ATR and Choppiness automatically
Session Profiles - Different settings for RTH vs ETH sessions
Organized Settings - 15+ input groups for easy configuration
Optional Panels - HTF Stack overview and performance metrics (default: OFF)
Data Exports - Hidden plots for strategy/library integration
RTA Health Monitoring - Built-in performance tracking
Setup & Configuration
Quick Start:
1. Apply indicator to any timeframe
2. Patterns and zones appear automatically
3. Adjust pattern detection sensitivity if needed
4. Configure zone styling (Solid/Dashed/Dotted)
5. Set up alerts for zone retests
Key Settings to Adjust:
Pattern Detection:
• Min RelVolume: Lower = more signals (0.8 Tweezer, 0.9 Kangaroo)
• Require trend context: Enable for stricter, higher-quality patterns
• Check wick similarity: Ensures proper rejection structure
Zone Management:
• Zone lifetime: How long zones remain active (default: 400 bars)
• Invalidate on close-through: Remove zones when price breaks through
• Max overlap: Prevent duplicate zones (default: 50%)
Scoring:
• Min Score BUY/SELL: Higher = fewer but better signals (default: 4.5/5.5)
• Component weights: Customize what factors matter most
• Signals require trend gate: OFF = more signals, ON = higher quality
Visual Customization
Zone Colors - Light red/green with 85% transparency (non-intrusive)
Border Styles - Solid, Dashed, or Dotted
Label Intensity - Darker greens for better readability
Clean Charts - All panels OFF by default
Understanding the Zones
Supply Zones (Red):
Created from bearish patterns (Tweezer Tops, Kangaroo Bears). Price made a high attempt to push higher, but was rejected. These become resistance areas where sellers may step in again.
Demand Zones (Green):
Created from bullish patterns (Tweezer Bottoms, Kangaroo Bulls). Price made a low with strong rejection. These become support areas where buyers may step in again.
Zone Quality Indicators:
• White border = Fresh zone, not tested yet
• Gray border = Zone expired or invalidated
• Thin zones (tight range) = Better risk/reward ratio
• Thick zones = Less precise, wider stop required
Trading Applications
Reversal Trading - Enter at pattern detection with tight stops
Zone Retest Trading - Wait for retests of established zones
Trend Confluence - Trade only when patterns align with trend
Risk Management - Use zone boundaries for stop placement
Target Setting - Opposite zones become profit targets
Pro Tips
Best signals occur when pattern + zone retest + trend all align
Lower timeframes = more signals but more noise
Higher timeframes = fewer but more reliable signals
Start with default settings, adjust based on your market
Combine with other analysis (structure, key levels, etc.)
Use alerts to avoid staring at charts all day
Important Notes
Not all patterns will lead to successful trades
Use proper risk management and position sizing
Patterns work best in trending or range-bound markets
Very choppy conditions may produce lower-quality signals
Always confirm with your own analysis before trading
Technical Specifications
• Pine Script v6
• RTA-Core integration
• RTA Core Library integration
• Maximum 200 boxes, 500 labels
• Auto-tuning based on ATR and Choppiness
• Session-aware threshold adjustments
• Memory-optimized zone management
What's Included
Tweezer Top/Bottom detection
Kangaroo Tail / Pin Bar detection
Automatic supply/demand zone creation
Volume validation system
Pattern strength scoring
Zone retest signals
Multi-factor confluence scoring
Optional HTF Stack panel
Optional performance metrics
Session profile support
Auto-threshold tuning
Alert conditions
Data exports for strategies
Author Waves Unchained
Version 1.0
Status Public Indicator
Summary
Reversal pattern detection with zone management, volume validation, and confluence scoring for tweezer and kangaroo tail patterns.
---
Disclaimer: This indicator is for educational and informational purposes only. Trading involves risk. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Always practice proper risk management.
[ZP] Fixed v6 testDISCLAIMER:
This indicator in Pine V6 as my first ever Tradingview indicator, has been developed for my personal trading analysis, consolidating various powerful indicators that I frequently use. A number of the embedded indicators within this tool are the creations of esteemed Pine Script developers from the TradingView community. In recognition of their contributions, the names of these developers will be prominently displayed alongside the respective indicator names. My selection of these indicators is rooted in my own experience and reflects those that have proven most effective for me. Please note that the past performance of any trading system or methodology is not necessarily indicative of future results. Always conduct your own research and due diligence before using any indicator or tool.
===========================================================================
Introducing the ultimate all-in-one DIY strategy builder indicator, With over 30+ famous indicators (some with custom configuration/settings) indicators included, you now have the power to mix and match to create your own custom strategy for shorter time or longer time frames depending on your trading style. Say goodbye to cluttered charts and manual/visual confirmation of multiple indicators and hello to endless possibilities with this indicator.
Available indicators that you can choose to build your strategy, are coded to seamlessly print the BUY and SELL signal upon confirmation of all selected indicators:
EMA Filter
2 EMA Cross
3 EMA Cross
Range Filter (Guikroth)
SuperTrend
Ichimoku Cloud
SuperIchi (LuxAlgo)
B-Xtrender (QuantTherapy)
Bull Bear Power Trend (Dreadblitz)
VWAP
BB Oscillator (Veryfid)
Trend Meter (Lij_MC)
Chandelier Exit (Everget)
CCI
Awesome Oscillator
DMI ( Adx )
Parabolic SAR
Waddah Attar Explosion (Shayankm)
Volatility Oscillator (Veryfid)
Damiani Volatility ( DV ) (RichardoSantos)
Stochastic
RSI
MACD
SSL Channel (ErwinBeckers)
Schaff Trend Cycle ( STC ) (LazyBear)
Chaikin Money Flow
Volume
Wolfpack Id (Darrellfischer1)
QQE Mod (Mihkhel00)
Hull Suite (Insilico)
Vortex Indicator
inside forex vip📌 SuperTrend
Based on:
ATR Period (default 10).
Multiplier ATR (default 3).
Calculates the trend direction (upward/downward).
Generates buy/sell signals:
Buy: Positive crossover with EMA color matching (bullish).
Sell: Negative crossover with EMA color matching (bearish).
Multi-Strategy Trading Screener SummaryI only combined famous scripts, all thanks to wonderful scripts and community out there .
ThankYou !
------
Core Architecture
Multi-Symbol Analysis: Tracks up to 5 configurable tickers simultaneously
Multi-Timeframe Support: Each symbol can use different timeframes
Real-Time Dashboard: Color-coded table displaying all signals and analysis
Trend Validation: All signals include trend alignment confirmation
Integrated Trading Strategies
1. Breaker Blocks (Order Blocks)
Detects institutional order blocks using swing analysis
Tracks when blocks are broken and become "breaker blocks"
Monitors retests of broken levels
Shows trend alignment (✓ aligned, ⚠️ misaligned)
2. Chandelier Exit
ATR-based trend-following exit system
Provides BUY/SELL signals based on dynamic stop levels
Uses configurable ATR multiplier and lookback period
3. Smart Money Breakout
Channel breakout detection with volatility normalization
Identifies accumulation/distribution phases
Generates persistent BUY/SELL signals on breakouts
4. Trendline Breakout
Dynamic trendline detection using pivot highs/lows
Calculates trendline slopes and breakout points
Provides BUY signals on upward breaks, SELL on downward breaks
Dashboard Columns Explained
Symbol: Ticker being analyzed
Trend: Overall SuperTrend direction (🟢 UP / 🔴 DOWN / ⚪ FLAT)
Timeframe: Analysis timeframe with clock icon
Breaker Block: Type (Bullish/Bearish) with trend alignment indicator
Status: Price position relative to breaker block (Inside/Approaching/Far)
Retests: Number of times the broken level was retested (indicates level strength)
Volume: Volume associated with the order block formation
Chandelier: BUY/SELL signals from Chandelier Exit strategy
Smart Money: BUY/SELL signals from breakout detection
Trendline: BUY/SELL signals from trendline breakouts
Key Features
No HOLD States: All signals show definitive BUY (🟢) or SELL (🔴) only
Persistent Signals: Signals remain active until opposite conditions trigger
Color Coding: Visual distinction between bullish (green) and bearish (red) signals
Trend Alignment: Enhanced accuracy through trend confirmation logic
This screener provides a comprehensive view of market conditions across multiple strategies, helping identify high-probability trading opportunities when signals align.






















