CMYK XIAM OPEN◊ Introduction
This is project XIAM, a work in progress.
Recently i came across the repainting problem.
Since then i haven't seen any bot-code that makes > 5% profit in two weeks with 0.25% fees/trade.
People who make good bots either bluff or don't share the code.
they let you rent it.
I aim to understand, learn it, write it myself. And share my findings with whoever shares with me.
◊ Origin
Based on RMI (RSI with momentum) and SMA, and values derived from those.
◊ Usage
Currently an investigative script.
◊ Theoretical Approaches
Philosophy α :: Cleansignal
:: Cleaning up the signal, from irregularities that cause unpredictable results.
Merging available tickers of a pair into one.
Merging available tickers of different coins into one in the correct proportion. (eg. Crypto market cap)
Removing Jitter, and smoothing signal without delay.
Philosophy β :: Rythmic
:: Syncing into the rythm's, to never miss the que, and trade on every theoretical low/high
Searching Amplitude, Period, Phase Shift, Frequency's of the carrier waves.
Marking Acrivity/inactivity of the carrier waves.
Partial Fractal repetition asses-able with above data?
Philosophy γ :: consequential
:: Seeking for Indicatory events and causal relations
Probability / reward.
Confirmation and culmination.
...
◊ Community
Wanna share your findings ? or need help resolving a problem ?
CMYK :: discord.gg
AUTOTVIEW :: discordapp.com
ابحث في النصوص البرمجية عن "文华财经tick价格"
BTC CorrelationA simple script to display how correlated the current ticker is to Bitcoin.
Inputs are the number of bars to check correlation for (default 10) and the the ticker to use for BTC comparison (default is BITFINEX:BTCUSD)
Values of 1 are highly correlated (i.e. bitcoin moves up, so does your current ticker), values of -1 are inversely correlated (i.e. bitcoin moves up, your current ticker moves down).
See: www.babypips.com for some more details on correlation
Price relation viewer - add percent change of two symbols (BETA)This script is very much beta!
This is a simple script to visualize how two symbols move in relation to each other. For example if the underlying symbol is a 2x Gold ETF (meaning the ticker moves at 2x the spot price of gold---if gold goes up 3% this ticker should go up 6%) and the comparison symbol is an 2x inverse gold ETF (at gold up 3% this should move down 6%). If these ETFs were 100% accurate at tracking the price of gold then this tool would report a value of zero at all times.
Day 1
Ticker - $10
Comparison - $10
Day 2
Ticker - $12
Comp - $11
This tool value - |20%| + -|10%| = 10%
It uses a short simple moving average to smooth things out a bit (see inputs). It is important to keep your axis scale in mind when using this! Two symbols that are always near zero mean they are offsetting each other very well but the value displayed might range from 0 to 0.005, but the graphed area can make it look extreme if autoscaled.
This is a tool with very specific uses : comparing how one digital currency moves in relation to bitcoin's price, comparing how gold moves in relation to silver, etc.
Multi-Timeframe VWAPShows the Daily, Weekly, Monthly, Quarterly, and Yearly VWAP.
Also shows the previous closing VWAP, which is usually very near the HLC3 standard pivot for the previous time frame. i.e. The previous daily VWAP closing price is usually near the current Daily Pivot. Tickers interact well with the previous Daily and Weekly closing VWAP.
Enabling the STDEV bands shows 3 separate standard deviation levels, defaulted at 1, 2, and 3. The lookback period for the bands is always changing with each new bar, since the standard deviation is calculated from the current bar to the beginning of the period. This is different from bollinger bands, as the lookback is constant (usually 20 periods is the textbook default).
The STDEV bands interval of interest can be changed from Day (D), Week (W), Month (M), Quarter (Q), Year (Y).
Tickers tend to bounce very well on Daily, Weekly, and Yearly VWAP (Yes... Year). Use this code and observe the Year VWAP on several major symbols through the past few years and eyes will be opened.
Free Strategy #08 (Combo of #01 and #02) (ES / SPY)This strategy was designed to be traded on daily data on the ES and SPY—the strategy was originally developed for NinjaTrader, which displays daily ES data based on RTH hours instead of 24 hours (1440 minute) like TradingView does, so we are presenting the results on the SPY until we figure out how to overcome this hurdle.
The strategy combines the two ideas from strategy #01 and strategy #02 .
Strategy #08
Quantity 100
Slippage: 2 ticks
Commission: 4.95 per order
Net Profit: 26,044.60
Max Drawdown: 3,947.60
Buy and Hold (Custom)
Quantity 100
Slippage: 2 ticks
Commission: 4.95 per order
Entry Long: 1993-02-01 @ 43.99
Exit Long: 2017-07-28 @ 246.34
Net Profit: 20,225.10
Max Drawdown: 9,042.00
Free Strategy #02 (ES / SPY)This strategy was designed to be traded on daily data on the ES and SPY—the strategy was originally developed for NinjaTrader, which displays daily ES data based on RTH hours instead of 24 hours (1440 minute) like TradingView does, so we are presenting the results on the SPY until we figure out how to overcome this hurdle.
Strategy #02
Quantity 100
Slippage: 2 ticks
Commission: 4.95 per order
Net Profit: 10,118.30
Max Drawdown: 4.037.60
Buy and Hold (Custom)
Quantity 100
Slippage: 2 ticks
Commission: 4.95 per order
Entry Long: 1993-02-01 @ 43.99
Exit Long: 2017-07-28 @ 246.34
Net Profit: 20,225.10
Max Drawdown: 9,042.00
True Strength Indicator MTFHere is an example of a script showing a multi-time frame of TSI.
Chart below compares FX EURUSD Daily TSI to 1H TSI
Here is an updated version
study("True Strength Indicator MTF", shorttitle="TSI MTF")
resCustom = input(title="Timeframe", type=resolution, defval="60" )
long = input(title="Long Length", type=integer, defval=25)
short = input(title="Short Length", type=integer, defval=13)
signal = input(title="Signal Length", type=integer, defval=13)
price = close
double_smooth(src, long, short) =>
fist_smooth = ema(src, long)
ema(fist_smooth, short)
pc = change(price)
double_smoothed_pc = double_smooth(pc, long, short)
double_smoothed_abs_pc = double_smooth(abs(pc), long, short)
tsi_value = 100 * (double_smoothed_pc / double_smoothed_abs_pc)
tsi = security(tickerid, resCustom,tsi_value)
plot(tsi, color=black)
plot(ema(tsi, signal), color=red)
hline(0, title="Zero")
Total Points Range by exp3rtsThis indicator measures and displays the true intraday movement of a market by approximating tick-level activity using 1-second data aggregation. Instead of only looking at net candle movement, it sums every price change during a session, giving traders a more accurate picture of market effort and volatility.
Total Points Moved (TPM) – Captures the full distance traveled by price, not just the net gain/loss.
Bullish vs. Bearish Movement – Separates upward and downward moves so you can see who dominated the session.
Custom Sessions – Define your own session start/end times and time zone for precise tracking.
End-of-Session Summary – Automatically plots a label at session completion with totals for TPM, bullish, and bearish movement.
Visual Session Highlighting – Background shading makes it easy to see when the chosen session is active.
This tool is useful for:
Understanding the true effort vs. result of price movement
Comparing volatility across sessions
Identifying whether bulls or bears contributed more to market swings
Supporting order flow and tick-based trading strategies
Market Mode Risk IndicatorMarket Mode Risk Indicator v1.1
This custom indicator helps traders gauge market risk sentiment by monitoring Exponential Moving Average (EMA) or Simple Moving Average (SMA) crossovers on key indices like BIST 100 (for Turkish markets), NASDAQ Composite (tech-focused US), or Dow Jones Industrial Average (industrial US). It dynamically categorizes the market into three actionable modes based on the index's position relative to layered MAs, providing a quick visual snapshot without cluttering your chart.
Risk Modes Explained:
RISK OFF (Red): Index closes below the Long MA (default 50 periods) – signals bearish caution; time to tighten stops or reduce exposure.
RISK TEST (Orange): Index above Medium MA1 (21 periods) and Extra Long MA (55 periods), but below Short MA (10 periods) and above Long MA – a transitional "test" phase; watch for confirmation before entering.
RISK ON (Green): Index above all MAs (Short, Medium, Long, Extra Long) – bullish green light; favorable for longs or momentum plays.
How It Works:
The core logic uses boolean checks on the index's close price against user-defined MA lengths. For example:
It pulls live data from your selected index via request.security.
Computes MAs with ternary operators for EMA (ta.ema) or SMA (ta.sma) based on your choice.
Mode detection relies on AND/OR conditions (e.g., aboveShort and aboveMed1 and aboveLong and aboveExtraLong for RISK ON) to filter noise and focus on meaningful shifts.
No lookahead bias – all calculations are historical and real-time compatible. Defaults (10/21/50/55) are inspired by common Fibonacci-inspired periods for balanced sensitivity.
Alerts fire only on mode transitions (e.g., from RISK OFF to ON) to prevent spam, using alertcondition with dynamic messages including price and ticker.
Customization Options:
Index & MA Settings: Switch EMA/SMA; tweak lengths (min 1 period) for your timeframe (e.g., shorter for intraday).
Display: Position the table (top/bottom, left/right); toggle MA values on/off.
Looks: Background/border/text colors, transparency (0-100%) for theme matching.
Built in Pine Script v5 for efficiency – lightweight, no repaints.
Usage Tips:
Add to any stock chart (e.g., GARAN for BIST analysis).
Select your index in settings; refresh chart if switching MA type.
Use on daily/4H timeframes for swing trading; alerts via email/SMS for hands-free monitoring.
Pro Tip: Combine with volume or RSI for confirmation – RISK ON + rising volume = stronger buy signal.
5/20 SMA Trade Signal//@version=5
indicator("5/20 SMA Trade Signal", overlay=true)
// Inputs (editable if you want to tweak later)
fastLen = input.int(5, "Fast SMA (default 5)", minval=1)
slowLen = input.int(20, "Slow SMA (default 20)", minval=1)
// Calculate SMAs
fastSMA = ta.sma(close, fastLen)
slowSMA = ta.sma(close, slowLen)
// Plot SMAs
plot(fastSMA, title="Fast SMA", color=color.orange, linewidth=2)
plot(slowSMA, title="Slow SMA", color=color.blue, linewidth=2)
// Signals (use bar close confirmation to avoid intrabar repaint)
bullCross = ta.crossover(fastSMA, slowSMA) and barstate.isconfirmed // 5 SMA closes ABOVE 20 SMA
bearCross = ta.crossunder(fastSMA, slowSMA) and barstate.isconfirmed // 5 SMA closes BELOW 20 SMA
// Label both as "TRADE SIGNAL"
plotshape(bullCross, title="TRADE SIGNAL (5 > 20)", style=shape.labelup, location=location.belowbar,
text="TRADE SIGNAL", color=color.new(color.green, 0), textcolor=color.white, size=size.tiny)
plotshape(bearCross, title="TRADE SIGNAL (5 < 20)", style=shape.labeldown, location=location.abovebar,
text="TRADE SIGNAL", color=color.new(color.red, 0), textcolor=color.white, size=size.tiny)
// Optional alerts for automation/webhooks
alertcondition(bullCross, title="5 SMA crossed ABOVE 20 SMA",
message="TRADE SIGNAL: 5 SMA crossed ABOVE 20 SMA on {{ticker}} @ {{close}}")
alertcondition(bearCross, title="5 SMA crossed BELOW 20 SMA",
message="TRADE SIGNAL: 5 SMA crossed BELOW 20 SMA on {{ticker}} @ {{close}}")
Howard Intraday Edge (JH Edge) - (VWAP + EMA9/EMA21 + RSI)Howard Intraday Edge (JH Edge)
A disciplined intraday trading system by J. Howard.
Uses VWAP, EMA 9/21, RSI, and Optional EMA 200 to confirm trends and momentum.
Automatically plots Clean stop-loss and take profit levels. Built for SPY 0DTE-5DTE options, but works on other liquid tickers.
Focus: 1-3 high probability trades/day with tight risk control.
Best used on 1 or 3 minute timeframes.
ATR SPREADThis is a comprehensive ATR SPREAD indicator for TradingView that combines volatility monitoring with spread analysis. Here's what it does and why it's useful:
Core Functionality
ATR Progress Tracking:
Monitors how much of the daily ATR (Average True Range) has been "consumed" during the current trading day
Calculates progress from two reference points: day's open and previous day's close
Displays progress as percentages or absolute values
Provides color-coded visual feedback (green → yellow → orange → red) based on ATR consumption levels
Spread Monitoring with Advanced Filtering:
Tracks current market spreads using multiple methods (minute high-low ranges, tick-to-tick differences)
Calculates rolling average spread to establish baseline conditions
Implements sophisticated filtering to exclude anomalous spread readings that could skew analysis
Key Features
Smart Filtering System:
Automatically filters out abnormal spreads during session opens
Excludes spreads that are too large relative to price or ATR
Removes outliers that exceed normal spread multiples
Maintains data quality for accurate analysis
Multi-Level Alert System:
ATR threshold alerts (50%, 80%, 100% consumption)
Customizable warning threshold (default 70%)
Spread expansion warnings and alerts
Session start notifications
Professional Dashboard:
Customizable information panel showing real-time metrics
Multiple positioning options and visual themes
Displays ATR status, progress percentages, current/average spreads
Color-coded status indicators for quick assessment
Trading Applications
Risk Management:
Helps traders understand how much daily volatility has been used up
Assists in position sizing based on remaining expected movement
Identifies periods of unusual market conditions
Market Condition Assessment:
Monitors liquidity conditions through spread analysis
Detects when spreads widen beyond normal levels
Filters out unreliable data during volatile periods
Entry/Exit Timing:
High ATR consumption may suggest limited further movement
Low ATR consumption early in the day might indicate potential for larger moves
Spread conditions help assess execution quality expectations
This indicator is particularly valuable for intraday traders, scalpers, and anyone who needs to monitor market microstructure conditions alongside volatility metrics. It provides a comprehensive view of both price movement potential (ATR) and execution environment quality (spreads) in a single, professional-grade tool.
Signal Core Basic [NevoxCore]⯁ OVERVIEW
Signal Core Basic is a clean and functional ATR-based trailing stop with BUY/SELL signals.
It modernizes the classic "UT-style" concept with adaptive sensitivity, multi-source inputs (Close, Heikin-Ashi, ZLEMA, KAMA), and compact visuals.
The tool is designed for traders who want a clear, minimal, and reliable base indicator without repainting issues.
⯁ HOW IT WORKS
Calculates an ATR-based trailing stop (nLoss = Key × ATR).
Adaptive mode scales sensitivity depending on trend strength (trend/range detection).
Trailing stop flips when price crosses from one regime to the other.
BUY/SELL signals trigger only when confirmed and not blocked by cooldown.
Label ring-buffer ensures chart stays clean (max 50 labels).
Bar coloring optional (solid), auto-disabled when classic red/green colors are enabled.
⯁ KEY FEATURES
ATR-based trailing stop with adjustable sensitivity.
Adaptive key (trend/range aware).
Multiple compute sources: Close, Heikin-Ashi, ZLEMA, KAMA.
Global confirm-on-close switch (no repaint).
Early-flip protection (cooldown).
Compact BUY/SELL labels with auto-cleanup (max 50).
Optional solid bar coloring.
Alerts with ticker, timeframe, and price included.
⯁ SETTINGS (quick overview)
Visual: Classic Colors, Show Labels, Plot Trailing Stop, Barcolor ON/OFF.
Source & Sensitivity: Key Value, ATR Length, Compute Source.
Advanced: Adaptive Key toggle with min/max bounds.
Global: Confirm on bar close.
Extras: Cooldown protection (bars).
⯁ ALERTS (built-in)
Basic Long: BUY signal.
Basic Short: SELL signal.
Each alert includes {{ticker}} {{interval}} @ {{close}}.
⯁ HOW TO USE
Use as a trailing stop and regime filter.
Combine BUY/SELL signals with your strategy rules.
Enable cooldown for cleaner signals in choppy markets.
Try ZLEMA or Heikin-Ashi as compute source for smoother performance.
⯁ WHY IT’S DIFFERENT
Unlike generic UT-style scripts, Signal Core Basic adds adaptive sensitivity, multiple input sources, and strict non-repaint safety.
The visuals follow NevoxCore’s design standards: compact, minimal, and clean — ready for live trading with alerts.
⯁ DISCLAIMER
Backtest and paper-trade before using live. Not financial advice.
Performance depends on market, timeframe, and parameters.
RSI DivergenceStrat WCredit to faytterro. Buy when RSI is staying flat or going up while the ticker price is going down. Sell when RSI is staying flat or going down while the ticker price is going up.
StratNinjaTable - VerticalA Pine Script v6 indicator that displays a vertical table with key The Strat data and supporting metrics.
✦ Table Structure:
Overview:
Ticker – the stock symbol.
TF – the chart’s main timeframe.
MFI – Money Flow Index with selectable timeframe.
ATR – Average True Range with color coding:
Green – below 3%.
Yellow – between 3% and 6%.
Red – above 6%.
Timeframes:
Displayed vertically (5m, 15m, 1H, D, W, M, etc.).
Each shows the current bar type according to The Strat (1, 2U, 2D, 3).
Text color reflects candle direction (green = close above open, red = close below open).
Includes a countdown timer to bar close.
Fundamentals:
Market Cap – in billions.
Sector – stock sector.
SMA20 Δ – distance from the 20-period SMA (in %).
Avg Volume (30d) – average 30-day volume (in millions).
✦ Adjustments Made:
Removed the Strat Pattern section completely.
Removed the DIR column – direction is now represented by Strat cell text color.
Reordered Overview section: Ticker → TF → MFI → ATR.
ATR now has three levels of coloring (Green/Yellow/Red) for >3% and >6%
Best MA Finder: Sharpe/Sortino ScannerThis script, Best MA Finder: Sharpe/Sortino Scanner, is a tool designed to identify the moving average (SMA or EMA) that best acts as a dynamic trend threshold on a chart, based on risk-adjusted historical performance. It scans a wide range of MA lengths (SMA or EMA) and selects the one whose simple price vs MA crossover delivered the strongest results using either the Sharpe ratio or the Sortino ratio. Reading it is intuitive: when price spent time above the selected MA, conditions were on average more favorable in the backtest; below, less favorable. It is a trend and risk gauge, not an overbought or oversold signal.
What it does:
- Runs individual long-only crossover backtests for many MA lengths across short to very long horizons.
- For each length, measures the total number of trades, the annualized Sharpe ratio, and the annualized Sortino ratio.
- Uses the chosen metric value (Sharpe or Sortino) as the score to rank candidates.
- Applies a minimum trade filter to discard statistically weak results.
- Optionally applies a local stability filter to prefer a length that also outperforms its close neighbors by at least a small margin.
- Selects the optimal MA and displays it on the chart with a concise summary table.
How to use it:
- Choose MA type: SMA or EMA.
- Choose the metric: Sharpe or Sortino.
- Set the minimum trade count to filter out weak samples.
- Select the risk-free mode:
Auto: uses a short-term risk-free rate for USD-priced symbols when available.
Manual: you provide a risk-free ticker.
None: no risk-free rate.
- Optionally enable stability controls: neighbor radius and epsilon.
- Toggle the on-chart summary table as needed.
On-chart output:
- The selected optimal MA is plotted.
- The optional table shows MA length, number of trades, chosen metric value annualized, and the annual risk-free rate used.
Key features:
- Risk-adjusted optimization via Sharpe or Sortino for fair, comparable assessment.
- Broad MA scan with SMA and EMA support.
- Optional stability filter to avoid one-off spikes.
- Clear and auditable presentation directly on the chart.
Use cases:
- Traders who want a defensible, data-driven trend threshold without manual trial and error.
- Swing and trend-following workflows across timeframes and asset classes.
- Quick SMA vs EMA comparisons using risk-adjusted results.
Limitations:
- Not a full trading strategy with position sizing, costs, funding, slippage, or stops.
- Long-only, one position at a time.
- Discrete set of MA lengths, not a continuous optimizer.
- Requires sufficient price history and, if used, a reliable risk-free series.
This script is open-source and built from original logic. It does not replicate closed-source scripts or reuse significant external components.
Mystic Pulse V2.0 [CHE] Mystic Pulse V2.0 — Adaptive DI streaks with gradient intensity for clearer trend persistence
Summary
Mystic Pulse V2.0 measures directional persistence by counting how often the positive or negative directional index strengthens and dominates. These counts drive gradient colors for bars, wicks, and helper plots, so intensity reflects local momentum rather than absolute values. A windowed normalization and gamma control adapt the visuals to recent conditions, preventing one regime from overpowering the next. The result is an immediate, at-a-glance read of trend direction and stamina without relying on crossovers alone.
Motivation: Why this design?
Classical DI and ADX signals can flip during choppy phases or feel sluggish in calm regimes. This script focuses on persistence: it increments a positive or negative streak only when the corresponding directional pressure both strengthens compared with the prior bar and dominates the other side. Simple OHLC pre-smoothing reduces micro-noise, and local normalization keeps the scale relevant to the last segment of data, not a distant past.
What’s different vs. standard approaches?
Reference baseline: Traditional DI and ADX lines with crossovers and fixed-scale thresholds.
Architecture differences:
Wilder-style recursive smoothing on true range and directional movement.
Streak counters for positive and negative pressure that advance only on strengthening and dominance.
Windowed normalization and gamma shaping for visual intensity.
Wick coloring via `plotcandle` with forced overlay from a pane indicator.
Practical effect: Bars and wicks grow more vivid during sustained pressure and fade during indecision. The column plots show streak depth directly, which helps filter one-bar flips.
How it works (technical)
1. Pre-smoothing: Open, high, low, and close are averaged over a short simple moving window to dampen micro-ticks.
2. Directional inputs: True range and directional movement are formed from the smoothed prices, then recursively smoothed using a Wilder-style update that carries prior state forward.
3. DI comparison: The script derives positive and negative directional ratios relative to smoothed range. A side advances its streak when it increases compared with the previous bar and exceeds the opposite side. The other streak resets.
4. Trend score and color base: The difference between positive and negative streaks defines the active side.
5. Normalization and gamma: The absolute streak magnitude and each side’s streak are normalized within a rolling window. Gamma parameters reshape intensity so mid-range values are either compressed or emphasized.
6. Rendering:
Two column plots show positive and negative streak counts in the pane with gradient colors.
A square marker at the bottom uses the global gradient as a compact heat cue.
Bar colors on the main chart use either the gradient, neutral trend colors, or no paint depending on toggles.
Wick, border, and candle overlays are colored via `plotcandle` with forced overlay.
7. State handling: Smoothed values and counters persist across bars; initialization uses first available values without lookahead. No higher-timeframe requests are used, so repaint risk is limited to normal live-bar evolution.
Parameter Guide
Show neutral candles (fallback) — Paints main-chart bars in plain up or down colors when gradients are disabled — Default false — Use when you prefer simple up/down coloring.
Show last N shapes — Limits bottom square markers — Default 333 — Reduce if your chart gets cluttered.
ADX smoothing length — Controls the Wilder smoothing window for range and directional movement — Default 9 — Larger values increase stability but respond later.
OHLC SMA length — Pre-smoothing for inputs — Default 1 — Increase slightly on noisy assets to reduce flip risk.
Gradient barcolor — Enables gradient bar paint on the main chart — Default true — Turn off to use wicks only or neutral bars.
Wick coloring — Colors wicks, borders, and bodies via overlay — Default true — Disable if it conflicts with other overlays.
Gradient window — Lookback for local normalization — Default 100 — Shorter windows adapt faster; longer windows provide steadier intensity.
Gradient transparency — Overall transparency for gradient paints — Default 0 — Increase to make gradients subtler.
Gamma bars/shapes — Contrast for bar and shape intensity — Default 0.70 — Lower values brighten mid-tones; higher values compress them.
Gamma plots — Contrast for the column plots — Default 0.80 — Tune separately from bar intensity.
Wick transparency — Transparency for wick coloring — Default 0 — Raise to let price action show through.
Up/Down colors (dark and neon) — Base and accent colors for both directions — Defaults as provided — Adjust to match your chart theme.
Reading & Interpretation
Pane columns: The green column represents the positive streak count; the red column represents the negative streak count. Taller columns signal stronger persistence.
Gradient marker: The bottom square indicates the active side and persistence strength at a glance.
Main-chart bars and wicks: Color direction shows the dominant side; intensity reflects the normalized and gamma-shaped streak magnitude. Faded tones suggest weak or fading pressure.
Practical Workflows & Combinations
Trend following: Enter in the direction of the active side when the corresponding column expands over several bars. Confirm with structure such as higher highs and higher lows or lower highs and lower lows.
Exits and stops: Consider scaling out when intensity fades toward mid-range while structure stalls. Tighten stops after extended streaks or when wicks lose intensity.
Multi-asset/Multi-TF: Use defaults for liquid assets on intraday to swing timeframes. For highly volatile instruments, raise smoothing and the normalization window. For calm markets, lower them to regain sensitivity.
Behavior, Constraints & Performance
Repaint/confirmation: Values update during the live bar and stabilize after bar close. No historical repaint beyond normal live-bar updates.
security()/HTF: Not used; cross-timeframe repaint paths do not apply.
Resources: Declared `max_bars_back` two thousand; no explicit loops or arrays; plot and label limits are generous.
Known limits: Streak counters can remain elevated during slow reversals. Very short normalization windows can cause rapid intensity swings. Gaps or extreme spikes may temporarily distort intensity until the window adapts.
Sensible Defaults & Quick Tuning
Start with: ADX smoothing nine, OHLC SMA one, normalization window one hundred, gradient and wick coloring enabled, gamma around zero point seven to zero point eight.
Too many flips: Increase ADX smoothing and the normalization window; consider a small bump in OHLC SMA.
Too sluggish: Decrease ADX smoothing and the normalization window.
Colors overpower chart: Increase gradient and wick transparency or raise gamma to compress mid-tones.
What this indicator is—and isn’t
This is a visualization and signal layer that represents directional persistence and intensity. It does not issue trade entries or exits on its own and is not predictive. Use it alongside market structure, volume, and risk controls.
Disclaimer
The content, including any code, is for educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice or a recommendation to buy or sell any instrument. Trading involves substantial risk, including the possible loss of principal. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Always do your own research and consider consulting a qualified professional.
Clean MA + Signals (overlay)//@version=5
indicator("Clean MA + Signals (overlay)", overlay=true)
// Inputs
maLen = input.int(50, "MA Length", minval=1)
maType = input.string("EMA", "MA Type", options= )
// MA
maCalc(src, len, typ) =>
switch typ
"SMA" => ta.sma(src, len)
"EMA" => ta.ema(src, len)
"RMA" => ta.rma(src, len)
"WMA" => ta.wma(src, len)
maLine = maCalc(close, maLen, maType)
plot(maLine, "MA", color=color.new(color.teal, 0), linewidth=2)
// Siqnallar — yalnız kəsişmə anında
longCond = ta.crossover(close, maLine)
shortCond = ta.crossunder(close, maLine)
plotshape(longCond, "LONG", location=location.belowbar, style=shape.triangleup, color=color.lime, size=size.small, text="LONG")
plotshape(shortCond, "SHORT", location=location.abovebar, style=shape.triangledown, color=color.red, size=size.small, text="SHORT")
alertcondition(longCond, "LONG Signal", "LONG signal on {{ticker}} {{interval}}")
alertcondition(shortCond, "SHORT Signal", "SHORT signal on {{ticker}} {{interval}}")
SMC Volatility Liquidity Prothis one’s a confluence signaler. it fires “BUY CALL” / “BUY PUT” labels only when four things line up at once: trend, volatility squeeze, a liquidity sweep, and MACD momentum. quick breakdown:
what each block does
Trend filter (context)
ema50 > ema200 ⇒ trendUp
ema50 < ema200 ⇒ trendDn
Plots both EMAs for visual context.
Volatility compression (setup)
20-period Bollinger Bands (stdev 2).
bb_squeeze is true when current band width < its 20-SMA ⇒ price is compressed (potential energy building).
Liquidity sweep (trigger)
Tracks 20-bar swing high/low.
Long sweep: high > swingHigh ⇒ price just poked above the prior 20-bar high (took buy-side liquidity).
Short sweep: low < swingLow ⇒ price just poked below the prior 20-bar low (took sell-side liquidity).
MACD momentum (confirmation)
Standard MACD(12,26,9) histogram.
Bullish: hist > 0 and rising versus previous bar.
Bearish: hist < 0 and falling.
the actual entry signals
LongEntry = trendUp AND bb_squeeze AND liquiditySweepLong AND macdBullish
→ prints a green “BUY CALL” label below the bar.
ShortEntry = trendDn AND bb_squeeze AND liquiditySweepShort AND macdBearish
→ prints a red “BUY PUT” label above the bar.
alerts & dashboard
Alerts: fires when those long/short conditions hit so you can set TradingView alerts on them.
On-chart dashboard (bottom-right):
Trend (Bullish/Bearish/Neutral)
Squeeze (Yes/No)
Liquidity (Long/Short/None)
Momentum (Bullish/Bearish/Neutral)
Current Signal (BUY CALL / BUY PUT / WAIT)
(btw the comment says “2 columns × 5 rows” but the table is actually 5 columns × 2 rows—values under each label across the row.)
what it’s trying to capture (in plain english)
Trade with the higher-timeframe bias (EMA 50 over 200).
Enter as volatility compresses (bands tight) and a sweep grabs stops beyond a 20-bar extreme.
Only pull the trigger when momentum agrees (MACD hist direction & side of zero).
caveats / tips
It’s an indicator, not a strategy—no entries/exits/backtests baked in.
Signals are strict (4 filters), so you’ll get fewer but “cleaner” prints; still not magical.
The liquidity-sweep check uses the prior bar’s 20-bar high/low ( ), so on bar close it won’t repaint; intrabar alerts may feel jumpy if you alert “on every tick.”
Consider adding:
Exit logic (e.g., ATR stop + take-profit, or opposite signal).
Minimum squeeze duration (e.g., bb_squeeze true for N bars) to avoid one-bar dips in width.
Cool-down after a signal to prevent clustering.
Session/time or volume filter if you only want liquid hours.
if you want, I can convert this into a backtestable strategy() version with ATR-based stops/targets and a few toggles, so you can see stats right away.
Crypto Market Dominance Stacked with LabelsA professional stacked area chart showing the dominance of major crypto market segments: BTC, ETH, Top 100 Altcoins, and #101+ Altcoins. Each layer is color-coded for clarity and includes dynamic labels with the current dominance percentage. Provides a clear visual representation of market share trends for traders, analysts, and crypto enthusiasts.
Features:
Stacked visualization of BTC, ETH, Top 100, and small-cap altcoins (#101+).
Color-coded areas for easy identification.
Dynamic labels showing each category’s current dominance percentage.
Horizontal reference lines for percentage levels.
Approximates top 100 and #101+ altcoins using TOTAL2 and TOTAL3 market cap tickers.
Use Case:
Track how market share shifts between BTC, ETH, large altcoins, and smaller altcoins over time. Ideal for analyzing trends, spotting dominance changes, and visualizing overall crypto market structure.
Apex Edge Sentinel - Stop Loss HUDApex Edge – ATR Sentinel Stop Loss HUD
The Apex Edge – ATR Sentinel is a complete stop-loss intelligence system built as a clean, always-on HUD.
It delivers institutional-level risk guidance by calculating and displaying live ATR-based stop levels for both long and short trades at multiple risk tolerances.
Forget cluttered charts and repainting lines — Sentinel gives you a clear stop-loss reference panel that updates dynamically with every bar.
✅ Features
• Triple ATR Multipliers
User-defined (e.g. x1.5 / x2.0 / x2.5). Compare tight, medium, and wide stops instantly.
• Dual-Side SL Levels
Both Long and Short safe stop prices displayed side by side. No more guessing trend
bias.
• ATR Transparency
HUD shows ATR(length) so you always know the calculation basis. Default = 14, adjustable
to your style.
• ATR Regime Meter
Detects volatility conditions (LOW / NORMAL / HIGH) by comparing ATR to its SMA. Helps
you avoid over-tight stops in high-volatility markets.
• Tick-Aware Rounding
Stop levels auto-rounded to the instrument’s tick size (Gold = 0.10, FX = 0.0001, indices =
whole points).
Custom HUD Design
• Location: Top/Bottom, Left/Right
• Sizes: Compact / Medium / Large (desktop or mobile)
• Opacity control (25% default Apex styling)
How to Use
1. Load Sentinel on your chart.
2. Check the HUD:
• ATR(14): 2.6 → base volatility measure.
• x1.5 / x2.0 / x2.5 → instant SL levels for both long & short trades.
3. Before entering a trade → decide which multiplier matches your style (tight scalper vs wider swing).
4. Manually place your SL at the level displayed in the HUD.
Sentinel works as both:
• A pre-trade check (is ATR stop too wide for my RR?).
• A live risk compass (updated stop levels every bar).
Why Apex Sentinel?
Most ATR stop indicators clutter charts with lagging lines or repainting trails. Sentinel strips it back to what matters:
• The numbers.
• The risk levels.
• The context.
It’s a pure stop-loss HUD, designed for serious traders who want clarity, discipline, and instant reference points across any market or timeframe.
Notes
• This is a HUD-only system (no automatic SL line). Traders manually apply the SL level
shown in the panel.
• Defaults: ATR(14), multipliers 1.5 / 2.0 / 2.5. Adjust to your trading style.
• Best used on intraday pairs like XAUUSD, EURUSD, indices, but works universally.
Apex Edge Philosophy: Clean. Smart. Institutional.
No clutter. No gimmicks. Just precision tools for modern markets.
DynamoSent DynamoSent Pro+ — Professional Listing (Preview)
— Adaptive Macro Sentiment (v6)
— Export, Adaptive Lookback, Confidence, Boxes, Heatmap + Dynamic OB/OS
Preview / Experimental build. I’m actively refining this tool—your feedback is gold.
If you spot edge cases, want new presets, or have market-specific ideas, please comment or DM me on TradingView.
⸻
What it is
DynamoSent Pro+ is an adaptive, non-repainting macro sentiment engine that compresses VIX, DXY and a price-based activity proxy (e.g., SPX/sector ETF/your symbol) into a 0–100 sentiment line. It scales context by volatility (ATR%) and can self-calibrate with rolling quantile OB/OS. On top of that, it adds confidence scoring, a plain-English Context Coach, MTF agreement, exportable sentiment for other indicators, and a clean Light/Dark UI.
Why it’s different
• Adaptive lookback tracks regime changes: when volatility rises, we lengthen context; when it falls, we shorten—less whipsaw, more relevance.
• Dynamic OB/OS (quantiles) self-calibrates to each instrument’s distribution—no arbitrary 30/70 lines.
• MTF agreement + Confidence gate reduce false positives by highlighting alignment across timeframes.
• Exportable output: hidden plot “DynamoSent Export” can be selected as input.source in your other Pine scripts.
• Non-repainting rigor: all request.security() calls use lookahead_off + gaps_on; signals wait for bar close.
Key visuals
• Sentiment line (0–100), OB/OS zones (static or dynamic), optional TF1/TF2 overlays.
• Regime boxes (Overbought / Oversold / Neutral) that update live without repaint.
• Info Panel with confidence heat, regime, trend arrow, MTF readout, and Coach sentence.
• Session heat (Asia/EU/US) to match intraday behavior.
• Light/Dark theme switch in Inputs (auto-contrasted labels & headers).
⸻
How to use (examples & recipes)
1) EURUSD (swing / intraday blend)
• Preset: EURUSD 1H Swing
• Chart: 1H; TF1=1H, TF2=4H (default).
• Proxies: Defaults work (VIX=D, DXY=60, Proxy=D).
• Dynamic OB/OS: ON at 20/80; Confidence ≥ 55–60.
• Playbook:
• When sentiment crosses above 50 + margin with Δ ≥ signalK and MTF agreement ≥ 0.5, treat as trend breakout.
• In Oversold with rising Coach & TF agreement, take fade longs back toward mid-range.
• Alerts: Enable Breakout Long/Short and Fade; keep cooldown 8–12 bars.
2) SPY (daytrading)
• Preset: SPY 15m Daytrade; Chart: 15m.
• VIX (D) matters more; preset weights already favor it.
• Start with static 30/70; later try dynamic 25/75 for adaptive thresholds.
• Use Coach: in US session, when it says “Overbought + MTF agree → sell rallies / chase breakouts”, lean momentum-continuation after pullbacks.
3) BTCUSD (crypto, 24/7)
• Preset: BTCUSD 1H; Chart: 1H.
• DXY and BTC.D inform macro tone; keep Carry-forward ON to bridge sparse ticks.
• Prefer Dynamic OB/OS (15/85) for wider swings.
• Fade signals on weekend chop; Breakout when Confidence > 60 and MTF ≥ 1.0.
4) XAUUSD (gold, macro blend)
• Preset: XAUUSD 4H; Chart: 4H.
• Weights tilt to DXY and US10Y (handled by preset).
• Coach + MTF helps separate trend legs from news pops.
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Best practices
• Theme: Switch Light/Dark in Inputs; the panel adapts contrast automatically.
• Export: In another script → Source → DynamoSent Pro+ → DynamoSent Export. Build your own filters/strategies atop the same sentiment.
• Dynamic vs Static OB/OS:
• Static 30/70: fast, universal baseline.
• Dynamic (quantiles): instrument-aware; use 20/80 (default) or 15/85 for choppy markets.
• Confidence gate: Start at 50–60% to filter noise; raise when you want only A-grade setups.
• Adaptive Lookback: Keep ON. For ultra-liquid indices, you can switch it OFF and set a fixed lookback.
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Non-repainting & safety notes
• All request.security() calls use lookahead=barmerge.lookahead_off and gaps=barmerge.gaps_on.
• No forward references; signals & regime flips are confirmed on bar close.
• History-dependent funcs (ta.change, ta.percentile_linear_interpolation, etc.) are computed each bar (not conditionally).
• Adaptive lookback is clamped ≥ 1 to avoid lowest/highest errors.
• Missing-data warning triggers only when all proxies are NA for a streak; carry-forward can bridge small gaps without repaint.
⸻
Known limits & tips
• If a proxy symbol isn’t available on your plan/exchange, you’ll see the NA warning: choose a different symbol via Symbol Search, or keep Carry-forward ON (it defaults to neutral where needed).
• Intraday VIX is sparse—using Daily is intentional.
• Dynamic OB/OS needs enough history (see dynLenFloor). On short histories it gracefully falls back to static levels.
Thanks for trying the preview. Your comments drive the roadmap—presets, new proxies, extra alerts, and integrations.
Dynamic Stop Loss Optimizer [BackQuant]Dynamic Stop Loss Optimizer
Overview
Stop placement decides expectancy. This tool gives you three professional-grade, adaptive stop engines, ATR, Volatility, and Hybrid. So your exits scale with current conditions instead of guessing fixed ticks. It trails intelligently, redraws as the market evolves, and annotates the chart with clean labels/lines and a compact stats table. Pick the engine that fits the trade, or switch on the fly.
What it does
Calculates three adaptive stops in real time (ATR-based, Volatility-based, and Hybrid) and keeps them trailed as price makes progress.
Shows exactly where your risk lives with on-chart levels, color-coded markers (long/short), and precise “Risk %” labels at the current bar.
Surfaces context you actually use - current ATR, daily volatility, selected method, and the live stop level—in a tidy, movable table.
Fires alerts on stop hits so you can automate exits or journal outcomes without staring at the screen.
Why it matters
Adaptive risk control: Stops expand in fast tape and tighten in quiet tape. You’re not punished for volatility; you’re aligned with it.
Consistency across assets: The same playbook works whether you’re trading indexes, FX, crypto, or equities, because the engine normalizes to each symbol’s behavior.
Cleaner decision-making: One chart shows your entry idea and its invalidation in the same breath. If price trespasses, you know it instantly.
The three methods (choose your engine)
1) ATR Based “Structure-aware” distance
This classic approach keys off Average True Range to set a stop just beyond typical bar-to-bar excursion. It adapts smoothly to changing ranges and respects swing structure.
Use when: you want a steady, intuitive buffer that tracks trend legs without hugging price.
See it in action:
2) Volatility Based “Behavior-aware” distance
This engine derives stop distance from current return volatility (annualized, then scaled back down to the session). It reacts to regime shifts quickly and normalizes risk across symbols with very different prices.
Use when: you want the stop to breathe with realized volatility and respond faster to heat-ups/cool-downs.
See it in action:
3) Hybrid “Best of both worlds”
The Hybrid blends the ATR and Volatility distances into one consensus level, then trails it intelligently. You get the structural common sense of ATR and the regime sensitivity of Vol.
Use when: you want robust, all-weather behavior without micromanaging inputs.
See it in action:
How it trails
Longs: The stop ratchets up with favorable movement and holds its ground on shallow pullbacks. If price closes back into the risk zone, the level refreshes to the newest valid distance.
Shorts: Mirror logic ratchets down with trend, resists noise, and refreshes if price reclaims the zone.
Hybrid trailing: Uses the blended distance and the same “no give-backs” principle to keep gains protected as structure builds.
Reading the chart
Markers: Circles = ATR stops, Crosses = Vol stops, Diamonds = Hybrid. Colors indicate long (red level under price) vs short (green level above price).
Lines: The latest active stop is extended with a dashed line so you can see it at a glance.
Labels: “Long SL / Short SL” shows the exact price and current risk % from the last close no math required.
Table: ATR value, Daily Vol %, your chosen Method, the Current SL, and Risk %—all in one compact block that you can pin top-left/right/center.
Quick workflow
Define the idea: Long or Short, and which engine fits the tape (ATR, Vol, or Hybrid).
Place and trail: Let the optimizer print the level; trail automatically as the move develops.
Manage outcomes: If the line is tagged, you’re out clean. If it holds, you’ve contained heat while giving the trade room to work.
Inputs you’ll actually touch
Calculation Settings
ATR Length / Multiplier: Controls the “structural” cushion.
Volatility Length / Multiplier: Controls the “behavioral” cushion.
Trading Days: 252 or 365 to keep the volatility math aligned with the asset’s trading calendar.
Stop Loss Method
ATR Based | Volatility Based | Hybrid : Switch engines instantly to fit the trade.
Position Type
Long | Short | Both : Show only what you need for the current strategy.
Visual Settings
Show ATR / Vol / Hybrid Stops: Toggle families on/off.
Show Labels: Print price + Risk % at the live stop.
Table Position: Park the metrics where you like.
Coloring
Long/Short/Hybrid colors: Set a palette that matches your theme and stands out on your background.
Practical patterns to watch
Trend-pullback continuation: The stop ratchets behind higher lows (long) or lower highs (short). If price tests the level and rejects, that’s your risk-defined continuation cue.
Break-and-run: After a clean break, the Hybrid will usually sit slightly wider than pure Vol, use it to avoid getting shaken on the first retest.
Range compression: When the ATR and Vol distances converge, the table will show small Risk %. That’s your green light to size up with the same dollar risk, or keep it conservative if you expect expansion.
Alerts
Long Stop Loss Hit : Notifies when price crosses below the live long stop.
Short Stop Loss Hit : Notifies when price crosses above the live short stop.
Why this feels “set-and-serious”
You get a single look that answers three questions in real time: “Where’s my line in the sand?”, “How much heat am I taking right now?”, and “Is this distance appropriate for current conditions?” With ATR, Vol, and Hybrid in one tool, you can run the exact same playbook across symbols and regimes while keeping your chart clean and your risk explicit.