Algorithmic Kalman Filter [CRYPTIK1]Price action is chaos. Markets are driven by high-frequency algorithms, emotional reactions, and raw speculation, creating a constant stream of noise that obscures the true underlying trend. A simple moving average is too slow, too primitive to navigate this environment effectively. It lags, it gets chopped up, and it fails when you need it most.
This script implements an Algorithmic Kalman Filter (AKF), a sophisticated signal processing algorithm adapted from aerospace and robotic guidance systems. Its purpose is singular: to strip away market noise and provide a hyper-adaptive, self-correcting estimate of an asset's true trajectory.
The Concept: An Adaptive Intelligence
Unlike a moving average that mindlessly averages past data, the Kalman Filter operates on a two-step principle: Predict and Update.
Predict: On each new bar, the filter makes a prediction of the true price based on its previous state.
Update: It then measures the error between its prediction and the actual closing price. It uses this error to intelligently correct its estimate, learning from its mistakes in real-time.
The result is a flawlessly smooth line that adapts to volatility. It remains stable during chop and reacts swiftly to new trends, giving you a crystal-clear view of the market's real intention.
How to Wield the Filter: The Core Settings
The power of the AKF lies in its two tuning parameters, which allow you to calibrate the filter's "brain" to any asset or timeframe.
Process Noise (Q) - Responsiveness: This controls how much you expect the true trend to change.
A higher Q value makes the filter more sensitive and responsive to recent price action. Use this for highly volatile assets or lower timeframes.
A lower Q value makes the filter smoother and more stable, trusting that the underlying trend is slow-moving. Use this for higher timeframes or ranging markets.
Measurement Noise (R) - Smoothness: This controls how much you trust the incoming price data.
A higher R value tells the filter that the price is extremely noisy and to be more skeptical. This results in a much smoother, slower-moving line.
A lower R value tells the filter to trust the price data more, resulting in a line that tracks price more closely.
The interaction between Q and R is what gives the filter its power. The default settings provide a solid baseline, but a true operator will fine-tune these to perfectly match the rhythm of their chosen market.
Tactical Application
The AKF is not just a line; it's a complete framework for viewing the market.
Trend Identification: The primary signal. The filter's color code provides an unambiguous definition of the trend. Teal for an uptrend, Pink for a downtrend. No more guesswork.
Dynamic Support & Resistance: The filter itself acts as a dynamic level. Watch for price to pull back and find support on a rising (Teal) filter in an uptrend, or to be rejected by a falling (Pink) filter in a downtrend.
A Higher-Order Filter: Use the AKF's trend state to filter signals from your primary strategy. For example, only take long signals when the AKF is Teal. This single rule can dramatically reduce noise and eliminate low-probability trades.
This is a professional-grade tool for traders who are serious about gaining a statistical edge. Ditch the lagging averages. Extract the signal from the noise.
Moving Averages
TURT Donchian Ladder v3.13How to trade TURT+ with the v3.13 script
1) Pick the system & arm the entry
• In the script, choose System = S1 (20D) or S2 (55D).
The HUD always shows both rails for reference, but the ladder (Entry/+Adds) uses the system you pick.
• Your Entry is shown as Pivot + 0.1×N (rounded).
• Place a stop-limit “parent” order at that Entry price. (Classic Turtle uses an entry stop; I suggest a tight limit offset so you don’t chase a blow-through.)
• Initial stop = N2 = Entry − 2×N (rounded). Put that in immediately.
If you like only confirming on a bar close, leave confirmClose = true and place the parent after the close that breaks out. If you want intrabar fills, set confirmClose = false and keep the stop-limit active intraday.
2) Size it the way you planned
• Set acctEquity / riskCapPct / posCapUSD / entryFrac / entryRiskFrac / sizingMode.
• HUD gives Rec Entry Qty (when flat) and, once in, it shows:
• Next Rung (price)
• Suggested AddShares (honors RiskCap & PosCap)
• Proj Stop if Add (ratcheted N2)
• A limiter note (RiskCap or PosCap) if you’re constrained.
3) After entry fills, stage the ADDs (only at fixed +N steps)
• Adds are NOT “every Donchian break.” You add only at:
• Add-1 = Entry + 0.5×N
• Add-2 = Entry + 1.0×N
• Add-3 = Entry + 1.5×N (optional)
• Use the HUD’s Suggested AddShares for each rung (it respects your RiskCap/PosCap).
• Place stop-limit orders for each add (either immediately as a contingent OTO chain that arms only after Entry fills, or you arm each add when price approaches—your choice).
• On each add fill, ratchet the catastrophic stop for the entire position to Last-Add − 2×N (the script and HUD show Proj Stop if Add so you know where it will land). Never move it lower.
Pro tip: If your broker supports OTO/OTOCO:
• OTO parent = Entry stop-limit.
• On fill, fire an OCO with the N2 stop (no target), and also stage child stop-limits for Add-1 / Add-2 / Add-3 with the correct sizes. If your broker can’t chain that deep, just use the script’s alerts (Entry/Add-1/Add-2/Add-3/Exits) to place/adjust orders quickly.
4) Exits (two layers)
• Catastrophic (always on): the N2 stop you’re ratcheting (Last-Add − 2×N).
• Trend exits (runner):
• S1: 10-low close (HUD shows it).
• S2: 20-low close (HUD shows it).
• Profit-taking (optional): sell ~50% at +2.5R to +3R vs current N2; let the runner trail with 10-low/20-low. You can keep N2 as a hard backstop.
5) Should you pre-set everything or buy live?
Both work; pick the style that fits you:
Preset (Turtle-pure, rules-based)
• ✅ You won’t miss the breakout; minimal discretion.
• ✅ Broker handles fills even if you’re away.
• ⚠️ You may get the occasional intraday “poke” (use confirmClose + place after close if you want fewer).
Buy on break manually
• ✅ Lets you check tape/volume or any extra gates before clicking.
• ⚠️ Higher chance of slippage or of simply missing the trigger.
A nice hybrid: place the Entry order, then arm Add-1/2/3 when price is nearing each rung and the HUD shows Suggested AddShares > 0 (green risk read).
⸻
6) Quick checklist per trade
1. System: S1 or S2?
2. Levels: Entry / Add-1 / Add-2 / Add-3 / 10-low / 20-low / N2 (rounded).
3. Sizing: confirm RiskCap/PosCap; HUD shows Suggested AddShares and limiter.
4. Orders:
• Parent Entry stop-limit.
• N2 stop (rounded).
• Stage adds (stop-limits) with sizes from HUD.
5. On fill: ratchet stop to Last-Add − 2×N; adjust remaining adds and sizes.
⸻
7) Example with your MU position (pattern)
• You’re already in: set entryQty and entryPman in the inputs to match your fill.
• HUD now focuses on Next Rung, Suggested AddShares, and Proj Stop if Add.
• If Suggested AddShares = 0 and limiter says RiskCap or PosCap, you’ll still see the next rung price and Proj Stop if Add so you can decide whether to override.
⸻
Bottom line
• Entry: buy the Donchian breakout + 0.1N with a stop-limit (Turtle style).
• Adds: only at +0.5N steps, sized by HUD; not on every future Donchian break.
• Stops: keep (and ratchet) the N2 catastrophic; trail runner on 10-low / 20-low.
If you want, tell me your broker/platform and I’ll map this to exact order ticket types (stop-limit/OTO/OCO) and a tiny checklist you can keep next to your screen.
Daily EMA 50Daily EMA 50 Indicator
This indicator displays the 50-period Exponential Moving Average based on daily closing prices. It uses security() function to fetch daily data, making it consistent across all timeframes.
The EMA is plotted in orange and helps identify the overall daily trend direction. It's particularly useful for:
- Confirming long-term trend bias
- Identifying potential support/resistance levels
- Filtering trade directions on lower timeframes
Features:
- Works on any chart timeframe
- Updates automatically with daily data
- Clean visual representation with orange line
EMA Zonen + Projektion (21, 50 + 200)standard 21ema, 50ema and 200ema,
ema Projection for next 3 Bars,
1% Box above to below all emas.
RSI OB/OSRSI OB/OS Signals indicator
The RSI OB/OS Signals indicator is an analysis and training tool that uses simple statistical learning (rolling correlations and z-scoring) to produce a smoothed, adaptive RSI weighting and signal line intended to highlight probable short-term RSI movements. The script does not attempt black-box machine-learning model export instead, it uses transparent building blocks — returns, RSI, ATR percentage, volume change (log), and raw volume — as predictors to estimate the likely next-bar RSI, then converts that estimate into a bounded “weight” and a smoothed signal line. The objective is educational: show how simple correlation-based weighting of standardized features can serve as an RSI augmentation and help traders identify higher-probability bullish or bearish RSI cross conditions, while making all internal reasoning visible and explainable.
At its core the indicator performs three conceptual steps each bar: first it computes a set of per-bar features aligned to the target (prior bar RSI) — specifically prior-bar log returns, prior-bar RSI, ATR as percent of price, the log change in volume and the prior-bar raw volume.
Second it standardizes these predictors through rolling z-scoring and computes rolling Pearson correlations between each standardized predictor and the target RSI over a user-configurable learning window. These correlations act as signed linear weights: predictors with higher absolute correlation are treated as more informative for that window.
Third it forms a linear prediction by summing correlation × z(feature) across the top correlated predictors, then maps that standardized prediction back to RSI scale using the rolling mean and standard deviation of the target. The mapped prediction is finally converted to a bounded “rsiWeight,” smoothed by a signal moving average, and used to produce bullish/bearish events on crossovers of preconfigured thresholds.
VWAP, buy/sell volume breakdown and simple tracking of the price move since the last signal are also displayed to help traders interpret the quality of signals.
The components are chosen for clear, complementary roles rather than as a random mashup. Prior-bar RSI embodies short-term momentum and is the natural prediction target.
Log returns add price-direction information; ATR percent encodes the intrabar volatility regime (helpful because RSI behaviour differs in high vs low volatility); the volume log-change and raw volume provide a participation signal indicating whether structural moves are supported by real activity. Standardizing predictors and using rolling correlations lets the script adapt its emphasis to the current regime: when volume changes correlate strongly with subsequent RSI moves, the algorithm will weight that predictor more heavily; when returns correlate more, weight shifts accordingly. Because the method is linear, transparent and computed on rolling windows you can reproduce and reason about the weight changes — a key requirement for educational clarity and TradingView compliance.
How to read and use the indicator practically: treat the smoothed rsiWeight line (ma_rsi) and its threshold crossings as an RSI-augmentation alert — not as a standalone automated buy/sell system. A practical workflow is: first inspect the dashboard and confirm the underlying drivers (which predictors show strong z-scores and which had high rolling correlation in the learning window); second check VWAP position and volume split to ensure that the price move is supported; third only consider signals that coincide with your higher-timeframe bias or structural support/resistance.
For example, a bullish crossover (ma_rsi crossing above −0.5) that occurs while VWAP is below price, buy volume share is elevated, and ATR is moderate is a higher-quality setup than the same crossing on thin volume and extreme ATR.
Use ATR or recent swing structure for stop placement and predefine risk per trade. Because the indicator tracks max points since the last signal, you can also use that metric as a simple intraday performance monitor.
Parameter tuning guidance: the learning window (learnLen) controls how quickly the correlation weights adapt; a short window (e.g., 10–20) makes the predictor weights responsive to regime shifts but also noisier; a longer window (e.g., 40–80) smooths weights and emphasizes longer-term relationships.
The rsiLen (target RSI length) should match your intended horizon — 14 is standard and balances responsiveness and smoothness. sigLen controls the smoothing of the predicted RSI weight: lower values make the signal line more reactive (useful for scalping), higher values produce smoother signals (useful for swing trades).
For low-liquidity instruments increase learnLen and sigLen to reduce false alarms; for high-speed intra-day work shorten them. Volume heuristics (volume thresholds) are instrument dependent — calibrate volume formatting and volumetric thresholds for equities versus futures or crypto.
Limitations and failure modes are explicit and important: the feature-selection approach is linear and based on Pearson correlation — it cannot capture nonlinear dependencies or temporal lags beyond the single lag studied, so it may miss relationships that require higher-order features.
The volume split used (close>open vs closeopen vs close
Комбинированный сигнал: MA10/MA40 + RSI50 + ЧайкинFriends, I share with you my indicator by strategy: crossing MA10/MA40 + RSI50 + Chaikin (above/below 0).
Indicator when the signal appears shows the entrance to the long/ short
The indicator works well on the trend. There may be false signals in the sidewall.
RSI MA Cross + Divergence Signal (fixed)🔹 Core Logic
RSI + Moving Average
The script calculates a standard RSI (default 14).
It then overlays a moving average (SMA/EMA/WMA, default 9).
When RSI crosses above its MA → bullish momentum.
When RSI crosses below its MA → bearish momentum.
Divergence Filter
Signals are only valid if there’s confirmed divergence:
Bullish divergence: Price makes a lower low, RSI makes a higher low.
Bearish divergence: Price makes a higher high, RSI makes a lower high.
Overbought / Oversold Filter
Optional extra:
Bullish signals only valid if RSI ≤ 30 (oversold).
Bearish signals only valid if RSI ≥ 70 (overbought).
This ensures signals happen in “stretched” conditions.
Risk & Trade Management
Entries taken only when all conditions align.
Exits can be managed with ATR stops, partial take-profits, breakeven moves, and trailing stops (we coded these in the strategy version).
Cooldown, session filters, and daily loss guard to keep risk tight.
🔹 Strengths
✅ High selectivity: Combining RSI cross + divergence + OB/OS means signals are rare but higher quality.
✅ Great at catching reversals: Divergence highlights where price may be running out of steam.
✅ Risk management baked in: ATR stops + partial exits smooth out equity curve.
✅ Works across markets: ES, FX, crypto — anywhere RSI divergences are respected.
✅ Flexible: You can loosen/tighten filters depending on aggressiveness.
🔹 Weaknesses
❌ Lag from pivots: Divergence only confirms after a few bars → you enter late sometimes.
❌ Choppy in ranges: In sideways markets, RSI divergences appear often and whipsaw.
❌ Filters reduce signals: With all filters ON (divergence + OB/OS + trend + session), signals can be very rare — may under-trade.
❌ Not standalone: Needs higher-timeframe context (trend, liquidity pools) to avoid counter-trend entries.
🔹 Best Ways to Trade It
Use Higher Timeframe Bias
Run the strategy on 15m/1H, but only trade in direction of higher timeframe trend (e.g., 4H EMA).
Example: If daily is bullish → only take bullish divergences.
Pair With Structure
Look for signals at key zones: HTF support/resistance, VWAP, or FVGs.
Divergence + RSI cross inside an FVG is a strong entry trigger.
Adjust OB/OS for Volatility
For crypto/FX: use 35/65 instead of 30/70 (markets trend harder).
For ES/S&P: 30/70 works fine.
Risk Management Is King
Use partial exits: take profit at 1R, trail rest.
Size by % of equity (we coded this into the strategy).
Avoid News Spikes
Divergences break down around CPI, NFP, Fed announcements — stay flat.
🔹 When It Shines
Trending markets that make extended pushes → clean divergences.
Reversal zones (oversold → bullish bounce, overbought → bearish fade).
Swing trading (15m–4H) — less noise than 1m/5m scalping.
🔹 When to Avoid
Low volatility chop → lots of false divergences.
During high-impact news → RSI swings wildly.
In strong one-way trends without pullbacks — divergence keeps calling tops/bottoms too early.
✅ Summary:
This is a reversal-focused RSI divergence strategy with strict filters. It’s powerful when combined with higher-timeframe bias + structure confluence, but weak if traded blindly in choppy or news-driven conditions. Best to treat it as a precision entry trigger, not a full system — layer it on top of your FVG/ORB framework for maximum edge.
Confluence Engine Confluence Engine is a practical, non-repainting decision aid that scores market conditions from −100…+100 by combining six proven modules: Trend, Momentum, Volatility, Volume, Structure, and an HTF confirmation. It’s designed for crypto, forex, indices, and stocks, and it fires entries only on confirmed bar closes.
What’s inside
Trend: EMA 20/50/200 alignment plus a Supertrend/KAMA toggle (you choose the baseline).
Momentum: RSI + MACD with confirmed-pivot divergence detection.
Volatility: ATR% and Bollinger Band width vs its average to favor expansion over chop.
Volume: OBV-style cumulative flow slope + volume surge vs SMA×multiplier.
Market Structure: Confirmed pivots, BOS (break of structure) and CHOCH (change of character).
HTF Filter: Closed higher-timeframe context via request.security(..., barmerge.gaps_on, barmerge.lookahead_off).
Why it does not repaint
Signals are computed and plotted on closed bars only.
Pivots/divergences use confirmed pivot points (no forward look).
HTF series are fetched with lookahead_off and use the last closed HTF bar in realtime.
No future bar references are used for entries or alerts.
How to use (3 steps)
Pick a timeframe pair: use a 4–6× HTF multiplier (5m→30m, 15m→1h, 1h→4h, 4h→1D, 1D→1W).
Trade with the HTF: take longs only when the HTF filter is bullish; shorts only when bearish.
Prefer expansion: act when BB width > its average and ATR% is elevated; skip most signals in compression.
Suggested presets (start here)
Crypto (BTC/ETH): 15m→1h, 1h→4h. stLen=10, stMult=3.0, bbLen=20, surgeMul=1.8–2.2, thresholds +40 / −40 (intraday can try +35 / −35).
Forex majors: 15m→1h, 1h→4h. stLen=10–14, stMult=2.5–3.0, surgeMul=1.5–1.8, thresholds +35 / −35 (swing: +45 / −45).
US equities (liquid): 5m→30m/1h, 15m→1h/2h. stMult=3.0–3.5, surgeMul=1.6–2.0, thresholds +45 / −45 to reduce chop.
Indices (ES/NQ): 5m→30m, 15m→1h. Defaults are fine; start at +40 / −40.
Gold/Oil: 15m→1h, 1h→4h. Thresholds +35 / −35, surgeMul=1.6–1.9.
Inputs (plain English)
Use Supertrend (off = KAMA): choose the trend baseline.
EMA Fast/Mid/Slow: 20/50/200 by default for classic stack.
RSI/MACD + divergence pivots: momentum and exhaustion context.
ATR Length & BB Length: volatility regime detection.
Volume SMA & Surge Multiplier: defines “meaningful” volume spikes.
Pivot left/right & “Confirm BOS/CHOCH on Close”: structure strictness.
Enable HTF & Higher Timeframe: confirms the lower timeframe direction.
Thresholds (+long / −short): when the score crosses these, you get signals.
Signals & alerts (IDs preserved)
Entry shapes plot at bar close when the score crosses thresholds.
Alerts you can enable:
CONFLUENCE LONG — long entry signal
CONFLUENCE SHORT — short entry signal
BULLISH BIAS — score turned positive
BEARISH BIAS — score turned negative
Best practices
Focus on signals with HTF agreement and volatility expansion; require volume participation (surge or rising OBV slope) for higher quality.
Raise thresholds (+45/−45 or +50/−50) to reduce whipsaws in choppy sessions.
Lower thresholds (+35/−35) only if you also require volatility/volume filters.
Performance & scope
Works across crypto/FX/equities/indices; no broker data or special feeds required.
No repainting by design; signals/alerts are computed on closed bars.
As with any tool, results vary by regime; always combine with risk management.
Disclosure
This script is for educational purposes only and is not financial advice. Trading involves risk. Test on historical data and paper trade before using live.
Turnover// ========================================
// TURNOVER INDICATOR (成交额指标)
// ========================================
//
// This indicator calculates and displays the turnover (trading value) for each bar,
// which represents the total monetary value of shares traded during that period.
// Turnover = Volume × Price
//
// KEY FEATURES:
// • Multiple price basis options: VWAP (recommended for intraday) or HLC3 average
// • Visual representation with colored columns (red/green for down/up bars)
// • Moving average overlay to smooth turnover trends
// • Rolling sum calculation for cumulative turnover over specified periods
// • Fully customizable parameters for different trading strategies
//
// USE CASES:
// • Identify periods of high/low market activity and liquidity
// • Analyze institutional money flow and market participation
// • Spot potential breakout or reversal points based on turnover spikes
// • Compare relative trading interest across different timeframes
// • Monitor market strength during trend formations
//
// PARAMETERS:
// • Price Basis: Choose between VWAP (intraday focus) or HLC3 (daily+ timeframes)
// • Visual Options: Toggle MA, rolling sum, and color coding
// • Timeframe Flexibility: Adjust MA and sum periods for your analysis needs
//
// ========================================
Stocks Multi-Indicator Alerts (cryptodaddy)//@version=6
// Multi-Indicator Alerts
// --------------------------------------------
// This script combines technical indicators and basic analyst data
// to produce composite buy and sell signals. Each block is heavily
// commented so future modifications are straightforward.
indicator("Multi-Indicator Alerts", overlay=true, max_labels_count=500)
//// === Daily momentum indicators ===
// Relative Strength Index measures price momentum.
rsiLength = input.int(14, "RSI Length")
rsi = ta.rsi(close, rsiLength)
// Money Flow Index incorporates volume to track capital movement.
// In Pine Script v6 the function only requires a price source and length;
// volume is taken from the built-in `volume` series automatically.
mfLength = input.int(14, "Money Flow Length")
mf = ta.mfi(hlc3, mfLength)
// `mfUp`/`mfDown` flag a turn in money flow over the last two bars.
mfUp = ta.rising(mf, 2)
mfDown = ta.falling(mf, 2)
//// === WaveTrend oscillator ===
// A simplified WaveTrend model produces "dots" indicating potential
// exhaustion points. Values beyond +/-53 are treated as oversold/overbought.
n1 = input.int(10, "WT Channel Length")
n2 = input.int(21, "WT Average Length")
ap = hlc3 // typical price
esa = ta.ema(ap, n1) // smoothed price
d = ta.ema(math.abs(ap - esa), n1) // smoothed deviation
ci = (ap - esa) / (0.015 * d) // channel index
tci = ta.ema(ci, n2) // trend channel index
wt1 = tci // main line
wt2 = ta.sma(wt1, 4) // signal line
greenDot = ta.crossover(wt1, wt2) and wt1 < -53
redDot = ta.crossunder(wt1, wt2) and wt1 > 53
plotshape(greenDot, title="Green Dot", style=shape.circle, color=color.green, location=location.belowbar, size=size.tiny)
plotshape(redDot, title="Red Dot", style=shape.circle, color=color.red, location=location.abovebar, size=size.tiny)
//// === Analyst fundamentals ===
// Fundamental values from TradingView's database. If a ticker lacks data
// these will return `na` and the related conditions simply evaluate false.
rating = request.financial(syminfo.tickerid, "rating", period="FY")
targetHigh = request.financial(syminfo.tickerid, "target_high_price", period="FY")
targetLow = request.financial(syminfo.tickerid, "target_low_price", period="FY")
upsidePct = (targetHigh - close) / close * 100
downsidePct = (close - targetLow) / close * 100
// `rating` comes back as a numeric value (1 strong sell -> 5 strong buy). Use
// thresholds instead of string comparisons so the script compiles even when
// the broker only supplies numeric ratings.
ratingBuy = rating >= 4 // buy or strong buy
ratingNeutralOrBuy = rating >= 3 // neutral or better
upsideCondition = upsidePct >= 2 * downsidePct // upside at least twice downside
downsideCondition = downsidePct >= upsidePct // downside greater or equal
//// === Daily moving-average context ===
// 50 EMA represents short-term trend; 200 EMA long-term bias.
ema50 = ta.ema(close, 50)
ema200 = ta.ema(close, 200)
longBias = close > ema200 // price above 200-day = long bias
momentumFavorable = close > ema50 // price above 50-day = positive momentum
//// === Weekly trend filter ===
// Higher timeframe confirmation to reduce noise.
weeklyClose = request.security(syminfo.tickerid, "W", close)
weeklyEMA20 = request.security(syminfo.tickerid, "W", ta.ema(close, 20))
weeklyRSI = request.security(syminfo.tickerid, "W", ta.rsi(close, rsiLength))
// Weekly Money Flow uses the same two-argument `ta.mfi()` inside `request.security`.
weeklyMF = request.security(syminfo.tickerid, "W", ta.mfi(hlc3, mfLength))
weeklyFilter = weeklyClose > weeklyEMA20
//// === Buy evaluation ===
// Each true condition contributes one point to `buyScore`.
c1_buy = rsi < 50 // RSI below midpoint
c2_buy = mfUp // Money Flow turning up
c3_buy = greenDot // WaveTrend oversold bounce
c4_buy = ratingBuy // Analyst rating Buy/Strong Buy
c5_buy = upsideCondition // Forecast upside twice downside
buyScore = (c1_buy?1:0) + (c2_buy?1:0) + (c3_buy?1:0) + (c4_buy?1:0) + (c5_buy?1:0)
// Require all five conditions plus trend filters and persistence for two bars.
buyCond = c1_buy and c2_buy and c3_buy and c4_buy and c5_buy and longBias and momentumFavorable and weeklyFilter and weeklyRSI > 50 and weeklyMF > 50
buySignal = buyCond and buyCond
//// === Sell evaluation ===
// Similar logic as buy side but inverted.
c1_sell = rsi > 70 // RSI above overbought threshold
c2_sell = mfDown // Money Flow turning down
c3_sell = redDot // WaveTrend overbought reversal
c4_sell = ratingNeutralOrBuy // Analysts neutral or still buy
c5_sell = downsideCondition // Downside at least equal to upside
sellScore = (c1_sell?1:0) + (c2_sell?1:0) + (c3_sell?1:0) + (c4_sell?1:0) + (c5_sell?1:0)
// For exits require weekly filters to fail or long bias lost.
sellCond = c1_sell and c2_sell and c3_sell and c4_sell and c5_sell and (not longBias or not weeklyFilter or weeklyRSI < 50)
sellSignal = sellCond and sellCond
// Plot composite scores for quick reference.
plot(buyScore, "Buy Score", color=color.green)
plot(sellScore, "Sell Score", color=color.red)
//// === Confidence table ===
// Shows which of the five buy/sell checks are currently met.
var table status = table.new(position.top_right, 5, 2, border_width=1)
if barstate.islast
table.cell(status, 0, 0, "RSI", bgcolor=c1_buy?color.new(color.green,0):color.new(color.red,0))
table.cell(status, 1, 0, "MF", bgcolor=c2_buy?color.new(color.green,0):color.new(color.red,0))
table.cell(status, 2, 0, "Dot", bgcolor=c3_buy?color.new(color.green,0):color.new(color.red,0))
table.cell(status, 3, 0, "Rating", bgcolor=c4_buy?color.new(color.green,0):color.new(color.red,0))
table.cell(status, 4, 0, "Target", bgcolor=c5_buy?color.new(color.green,0):color.new(color.red,0))
table.cell(status, 0, 1, "RSI>70", bgcolor=c1_sell?color.new(color.red,0):color.new(color.green,0))
table.cell(status, 1, 1, "MF down",bgcolor=c2_sell?color.new(color.red,0):color.new(color.green,0))
table.cell(status, 2, 1, "Red dot", bgcolor=c3_sell?color.new(color.red,0):color.new(color.green,0))
table.cell(status, 3, 1, "Rating", bgcolor=c4_sell?color.new(color.red,0):color.new(color.green,0))
table.cell(status, 4, 1, "Target", bgcolor=c5_sell?color.new(color.red,0):color.new(color.green,0))
//// === Alert text ===
// Include key metrics in alerts so the chart doesn't need to be opened.
buyMsg = "BUY: RSI " + str.tostring(rsi, "#.##") +
", MF " + str.tostring(mf, "#.##") +
", Upside " + str.tostring(upsidePct, "#.##") + "%" +
", Downside " + str.tostring(downsidePct, "#.##") + "%" +
", Rating " + str.tostring(rating, "#.##")
sellMsg = "SELL: RSI " + str.tostring(rsi, "#.##") +
", MF " + str.tostring(mf, "#.##") +
", Upside " + str.tostring(upsidePct, "#.##") + "%" +
", Downside " + str.tostring(downsidePct, "#.##") + "%" +
", Rating " + str.tostring(rating, "#.##")
// Alert conditions use static messages; dynamic data is sent via `alert()`
alertcondition(buySignal, title="Buy Signal", message="Buy conditions met")
alertcondition(sellSignal, title="Sell Signal", message="Sell conditions met")
if buySignal
alert(buyMsg, alert.freq_once_per_bar_close)
if sellSignal
alert(sellMsg, alert.freq_once_per_bar_close)
//// === Watch-out flags ===
// Gentle warnings when trends weaken but before full sell signals.
warnRSI = rsi > 65 and rsi <= 65
warnAnalyst = upsidePct < 2 * downsidePct and upsidePct > downsidePct
alertcondition(warnRSI, title="RSI Watch", message="RSI creeping above 65")
alertcondition(warnAnalyst, title="Analyst Watch", message="Analyst upside shrinking")
if warnRSI
alert("RSI creeping above 65: " + str.tostring(rsi, "#.##"), alert.freq_once_per_bar_close)
if warnAnalyst
alert("Analyst upside shrinking: up " + str.tostring(upsidePct, "#.##") + "% vs down " + str.tostring(downsidePct, "#.##") + "%", alert.freq_once_per_bar_close)
//// === Plot bias moving averages ===
plot(ema50, color=color.orange, title="EMA50")
plot(ema200, color=color.blue, title="EMA200")
//// === Cross alerts for context ===
goldenCross = ta.crossover(ema50, ema200)
deathCross = ta.crossunder(ema50, ema200)
alertcondition(goldenCross, title="Golden Cross", message="50 EMA crossed above 200 EMA")
alertcondition(deathCross, title="Death Cross", message="50 EMA crossed below 200 EMA")
20 MA ReversionA mean reversion tactic with the 20 SMA:
the indicator is chcking specific parameters, such as the volume related to the last day's volume, distance from 20 SMA, CCI values and changes, trends, and recent gaps that will act as a magnet.
enjoy!
RTC EMA/SMA Combo IndicatorRTC Combo indicator with 20 EMA, 50 EMA and 200 SMA
Primarily used for Market Structure purpose
[davidev] EMA/MA with projection# EMA/MA with projection
## What it is
A lightweight overlay that plots up to three EMAs and one MA (default: 5/21/55 EMAs and 200 MA) and draws a forward projection from the current bar. The projection extrapolates the latest per-bar change (slope) to visualize where each average *could* be in the next N bars—useful for planning entries, dynamic support/resistance, and anticipating crossovers.
Note: The projection is a simple linear extrapolation of the most recent change. It is not a prediction or signal.
## How it works
Computes EMA1, EMA2, EMA3 and MA (SMA) on your chosen sources.
On the last bar only, it draws a short line segment ahead by `Bars Ahead`, using the most recent change (`ta.change()`) × number of bars to project the line.
Lines are **reused** and updated each tick (no clutter), and deleted on historical bars to avoid artifacts.
## Good for
Visualizing **dynamic levels** slightly ahead of price.
Quickly gauging **momentum** and **slope** of your moving averages.
Sketching possible **crossover timing** (e.g., 5 vs 21 EMA) without changing timeframe.
Cleaner charting: projection only renders on the last bar, so historical candles stay uncluttered.
## Tips
Combine with your market structure/volume tools; the projection helps **plan**, not predict.
Shorter EMAs react faster and will show more pronounced projected moves; longer MAs remain steadier.
Increase `Bars Ahead` on higher timeframes; keep it small on scalping charts to avoid overreach.
Transformer Flux DashboardHere’s a practical guide to what your Transformer Flux Dashboard does and how to use it.
What it is
A compact, two-column trading dashboard + signal pack that blends trend, MACD, and OBV into one view (“Flux Score”) and adds session awareness (pre-sessions and main sessions in Eastern time). It’s designed for regular candles by default and avoids repaint by letting you confirm on bar close.
Core pieces it calculates
Moving Averages
Two MAs: Fast (HMA/EMA) and Slow (HMA/EMA).
You choose length, line width, color, and transparency.
Trend engine (Strict/Lenient)
Uses the relation between Fast/Slow MA and a debounced fast-MA slope filter (slope > ATR×buffer).
Strict: requires fast>slow and slow rising (or the inverse for down).
Lenient: fast>slow or slow rising (or the inverse).
A confirmation window (bars) must hold true before trend flips. That window can be auto-tuned by session (Asia/London/NY) or set globally.
OBV confirmation (optional)
OBV smoothed by SMA; needs to be rising/falling for N bars (also session-aware if you enable presets).
MACD
Standard MACD Fast/Slow/Signal; the dashboard shows Bull ▲, Bear ▼ or Flat based on line vs signal.
Flux Score (top row)
A composite, smoothed gauge from 0–100:
40% Trend, 30% MACD, 30% OBV → EMA(3) smoothed.
Labels: Bullish ≥ 70, Bearish ≤ 30, otherwise Neutral.
Summary line explains why (e.g., “MACD↑, OBV↑, Trend up”).
Sessions & zones (Eastern/NY time)
Recognizes Asia / London / New York main sessions and pre-sessions using your chart’s Eastern time.
Session label (top of chart): text is white; background auto-matches the current session color (or your manual color).
Zone backgrounds (optional): off by default; when on, default transparency ≈ 95% (very light), with separate colors for each session and pre-session. A toggle lets you draw pre-session on top or beneath main sessions.
Signals & markers
Two strength tiers: Strong (Trend + OBV + MACD aligned) and Weak (2 of the 3 agree).
To reduce clutter, markers only appear on direction shifts (from last visible direction to a new one), and you can enforce a minimum bar gap.
Marker style:
Default Icons with LabelUp/LabelDown (tiny).
Colors: strong long = bright white by default; others configurable.
Weak markers are slightly offset from price using ATR so they don’t overlap wicks.
Dashboard (2-column)
Left column = label, right column = value:
Flux Score: numeric + Bullish/Neutral/Bearish tag.
Summary: short reason of the score.
Trend: UP / DOWN / FLAT (cell tinted green/red/gray).
MACD: Bull ▲ / Bear ▼ / Flat (tinted).
Signal: last printed signal + bar age (fresh signals get a lighter tint).
MA: slow MA type/length and up/down arrow.
Sess: current session label (e.g., “Pre-London”, “New York”).
VIX / VXN (optional): shows current value.
Auto tint: based on calm/watch/elevated thresholds (you control levels and colors).
Manual tint: fixed BG color if you prefer consistency.
Params: “P”=trend bars, “O”=OBV bars, mode (Strict/Lenient), and “Candles”.
You can set a global Default Transparency for the dashboard cells.
Key settings to know
Confirm On Close: when on (default), trend/OBV/MACD states use the last confirmed bar; this avoids mid-bar flicker and reduces repaint risk.
Session presets: when enabled, the number of bars required for confirmations tightens/loosens per session (e.g., Asia uses more bars than NY).
Colors & Opacity:
MA lines have their own transparency (default 0 = fully opaque).
Dashboard cells use a single global transparency (default 40%).
Session zones default to very light (95%) and are off by default.
VIX/VXN cells can auto-color by regime or use a manual background.
Markers:
“Icons” vs “Ticks.” Default is Icons with tiny labels up/down.
“Shift only” display reduces noise; you can also set min bar spacing.
How to read it (quick workflow)
Flux Score row: a fast “risk-on/off” gauge.
≥70 with green Trend/MACD cells → higher-conviction long context.
≤30 with red Trend/MACD cells → higher-conviction short context.
Summary explains why the score is what it is.
Signal row: tells you the last official signal and how many bars ago it fired. Fresh signals tint lighter.
MA row: aligns your slow baseline; arrow helps spot slow-turns early.
Sess row + label: know which market is active; behavior and your confirmation bars adapt by session if presets are on.
VIX/VXN (if enabled): extra context for risk regime (values and color band).
Good practices & caveats
It’s confirmation-based to reduce false flips; you’ll get signals slightly later, by design.
All signals are informational; there’s no position management or stops in this build (we removed the stop visuals by request).
If you switch to exotic chart types or extreme resolutions, re-tune lengths and confirmation bars (and potentially disable session presets).
For scalping, consider reducing confirmation bars and OBV smoothing; for higher timeframes, increase them.
Quick customization ideas
Want faster flips? Lower confirmBars and obvBars, increase slope buffer a bit to retain quality.
Want fewer weak signals? Show only strong markers (toggle off weak via colors/visibility or increase min bar gap).
Prefer EMA stacking? Set both Fast/Slow to EMA.
Don’t care about OBV? Turn OBV confirm off; Trend + MACD will drive
RSI ADX Bollinger Analysis High-level purpose and design philosophy
This indicator — RSI-ADX-Bollinger Analysis — is a compact, educational market-analysis toolkit that blends momentum (RSI), trend strength (ADX), volatility structure (Bollinger Bands) and simple volumetrics to provide traders a snapshot of market condition and trade idea quality. The design philosophy is explicit and layered: use each component to answer a different question about price action (momentum, conviction, volatility, participation), then combine answers to form a more robust, explainable signal. The mashup is intended for analysis and learning, not automatic execution: it surfaces the why behind signals so traders can test, learn and apply rules with risk management.
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What each indicator contributes (component-by-component)
RSI (Relative Strength Index) — role and behavior: RSI measures short-term momentum by comparing recent gains to recent losses. A high RSI (near or above the overbought threshold) indicates strong recent buying pressure and potential exhaustion if price is extended. A low RSI (near or below the oversold threshold) indicates strong recent selling pressure and potential exhaustion or a value area for mean-reversion. In this dashboard RSI is used as the primary momentum trigger: it helps identify whether price is locally over-extended on the buy or sell side.
ADX (Average Directional Index) — role and behavior: ADX measures trend strength independently of direction. When ADX rises above a chosen threshold (e.g., 25), it signals that the market is trending with conviction; ADX below the threshold suggests range or weak trend. Because patterns and momentum signals perform differently in trending vs. ranging markets, ADX is used here as a filter: only when ADX indicates sufficient directional strength does the system treat RSI+BB breakouts as meaningful trade candidates.
Bollinger Bands — role and behavior: Bollinger Bands (20-period basis ± N standard deviations) show volatility envelope and relative price position vs. a volatility-adjusted mean. Price outside the upper band suggests pronounced extension relative to recent volatility; price outside the lower band suggests extended weakness. A band expansion (increasing width) signals volatility breakout potential; contraction signals range-bound conditions and potential squeeze. In this dashboard, Bollinger Bands provide the volatility/structural context: RSI extremes plus price beyond the band imply a stronger, volatility-backed move.
Volume split & basic MA trend — role and behavior: Buy-like and sell-like volume (simple heuristic using close>open or closeopen) or sell-like (close1.2 for validation and compare win rate and expectancy.
4. TF alignment: Accept signals only when higher timeframe (e.g., 4h) trend agrees — compare results.
5. Parameter sensitivity: Vary RSI threshold (70/30 vs 80/20), Bollinger stddev (2 vs 2.5), and ADX threshold (25 vs 30) and measure stability of results.
These exercises teach both statistical thinking and the specific failure modes of the mashup.
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Limitations, failure modes and caveats (explicit & teachable)
• ADX and Bollinger measures lag during fast-moving news events — signals can be late or wrong during earnings, macro shocks, or illiquid sessions.
• Volume classification by open/close is a heuristic; it does not equal TAPEDATA, footprint or signed volume. Use it as supportive evidence, not definitive proof.
• RSI can remain overbought or oversold for extended stretches in persistent trends — relying solely on RSI extremes without ADX or BB context invites large drawdowns.
• Small-cap or low-liquidity instruments yield noisy band behavior and unreliable volume ratios.
Being explicit about these limitations is a strong point in a TradingView description — it demonstrates transparency and educational intent.
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Originality & mashup justification (text you can paste)
This script intentionally combines classical momentum (RSI), volatility envelope (Bollinger Bands) and trend-strength (ADX) because each indicator answers a different and complementary question: RSI answers is price locally extreme?, Bollinger answers is price outside normal volatility?, and ADX answers is the market moving with conviction?. Volume participation then acts as a practical check for real market involvement. This combination is not a simple “indicator mashup”; it is a designed ensemble where each element reduces the others’ failure modes and together produce a teachable, testable signal framework. The script’s purpose is educational and analytical — to show traders how to interpret the interplay of momentum, volatility, and trend strength.
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TradingView publication guidance & compliance checklist
To satisfy TradingView rules about mashups and descriptions, include the following items in your script description (without exposing source code):
1. Purpose statement: One or two lines describing the script’s objective (educational multi-indicator market overview and idea filter).
2. Component list: Name the major modules (RSI, Bollinger Bands, ADX, volume heuristic, SMA trend checks, signal tracking) and one-sentence reason for each.
3. How they interact: A succinct non-code explanation: “RSI finds momentum extremes; Bollinger confirms volatility expansion; ADX confirms trend strength; all three must align for a BUY/SELL.”
4. Inputs: List adjustable inputs (RSI length and thresholds, BB length & stddev, ADX threshold & smoothing, volume MA, table position/size).
5. Usage instructions: Short workflow (check TF alignment → confirm participation → define stop & R:R → backtest).
6. Limitations & assumptions: Explicitly state volume is approximated, ADX has lag, and avoid promising guaranteed profits.
7. Non-promotional language: No external contact info, ads, claims of exclusivity or guaranteed outcomes.
8. Trademark clause: If you used trademark symbols, remove or provide registration proof.
9. Risk disclaimer: Add the copy-ready disclaimer below.
This matches TradingView’s request for meaningful descriptions that explain originality and inter-component reasoning.
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Copy-ready short publication description (paste into TradingView)
Advanced RSI-ADX-Bollinger Market Overview — educational multi-indicator dashboard. This script combines RSI (momentum extremes), Bollinger Bands (volatility envelope and band expansion), ADX (trend strength), simple SMA trend bias and a basic buy/sell volume heuristic to surface high-quality idea candidates. Signals require alignment of momentum, volatility expansion and rising ADX; volume participation is displayed to support signal confidence. Inputs are configurable (RSI length/levels, BB length/stddev, ADX length/threshold, volume MA, display options). This tool is intended for analysis and learning — not for automated execution. Users should back test and apply robust risk management. Limitations: volume classification here is a heuristic (close>open), ADX and BB measures lag in fast news events, and results vary by instrument liquidity.
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Copy-ready risk & misuse disclaimer (paste into description or help file)
This script is provided for educational and analytical purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. It does not guarantee profits. Indicators are heuristics and may give false or late signals; always back test and paper-trade before using real capital. The author is not responsible for trading losses resulting from the use or misuse of this indicator. Use proper position sizing and risk controls.
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Risk Disclaimer: This tool is provided for education and analysis only. It is not financial advice and does not guarantee returns. Users assume all risk for trades made based on this script. Back test thoroughly and use proper risk management.
SMA Color Changing W/ Color Smoothing SMA color changing with ability to change settings for smoothing the color changing
Multi-Period SMA - flack0xA comprehensive moving average indicator featuring 7 fully customizable SMA periods designed for multi-timeframe trend analysis. Perfect for traders who want to visualize multiple moving average periods simultaneously without cluttering their charts with separate indicators.Key Features:
7 Independent SMAs with default periods: 2, 3, 9, 27, 81, 243, 2187
Individual Customization - Each SMA has its own period, color, line width, and visibility controls
Smart Defaults - Shorter SMAs use thinner lines, longer SMAs use thicker lines for visual hierarchy
Overlay Design - Properly overlays on price data without Y-axis attachment issues
Alert System - Built-in crossover alerts for key SMA levels (9 and 27 period)
ARVELOV EMA 8,15,40,200,400 + ORB + Intersection Dots ARVELOV EMA 8,15,40,200,400 + ORB + Intersection Dots
Description:
This powerful multi-strategy TradingView indicator combines multiple technical analysis tools into a single, easy-to-read overlay. It is designed for traders who want to track key exponential moving averages (EMAs), monitor opening range breakouts (ORB), and identify critical EMA intersections that can signal potential trend changes.
Features:
Exponential Moving Averages (EMAs):
Plots 5 EMAs (8, 15, 40, 200, 400) directly on the chart.
Each EMA has a distinct, customizable color for easy visualization.
Helps identify short-term, medium-term, and long-term trend directions.
Opening Range Breakout (ORB):
Calculates the high and low of a selected session (default: 09:30–09:45).
Highlights the area between ORB high and low with a semi-transparent fill.
Works with intraday charts and can be restricted by maximum timeframe/minutes.
Helps traders spot early breakout opportunities and key support/resistance levels.
EMA Intersection Dots:
Detects intersections between EMA 8 & 15 (short-term) and EMA 40 & 15 (medium-term).
Plots small, distinct dots at intersection points on the chart.
Includes alert conditions to notify traders when intersections occur.
Can be used to identify trend reversals, momentum shifts, or potential entry points.
Customizable Inputs:
EMA lengths and intersection tolerance percentages can be adjusted.
ORB session time and duration can be customized.
Usage:
Ideal for day traders and swing traders looking for trend confirmation and breakout signals.
Combines trend analysis (EMAs), breakout detection (ORB), and intersection-based alerts for enhanced trading decisions.
Works best on intraday charts, but long-term EMAs are visible on higher timeframes as well.
Benefits:
Single, unified script with multiple indicators reduces chart clutter.
Visual cues (EMAs, ORB fill, intersection dots) make it easier to analyze market behavior.
Alerts help traders stay proactive without constantly monitoring the chart.
Liquidity Lines 2.0Liquidity Lines Indicator Description:
This indicator detects points of liquidity based on reversals in price action. It simulates simple moving average (SMA) candles and identifies when raw price candles engulf either the low of a bullish SMA candle or the high of a bearish SMA candle. The liquidity point is then placed at the high of the bearish SMA candle or the low of the bullish SMA candle. These levels often correspond to areas where many traders place stop-loss orders and can provide insight into where “smart money” might be hunting liquidity.
Features and Alerts:
Liquidity Lines automatically track upper and lower liquidity levels and plot them as customizable horizontal lines on the chart. Users can adjust line length, color, width, and style, and choose whether lines extend to the right. The indicator also detects when these liquidity levels are “swept” by price and triggers alerts in real time, allowing traders to be notified of potential stop-loss hunts or key market reactions as they happen. This makes it easy to monitor critical liquidity zones without constantly watching the chart.
How to Use Strategically:
Traders can use these liquidity points to anticipate potential price reactions. For example, if price approaches a lower liquidity line from above, it may act as support or a zone where stop orders are being triggered. Conversely, an upper liquidity line may act as resistance or a trigger zone for stops above the market. Combining these levels with your existing market structure, trend analysis, or confirmation signals can help identify high-probability entries, exits, and areas where smart money activity may occur.
ARVELOV EMA 8/15/40/200/400ARVELOV EMA 8/15/40/200/400
This script plots five Exponential Moving Averages (EMAs) on the price chart to help identify market trends and potential trade opportunities.
EMA 8 (#ffeb3b, Yellow, linewidth 4) → Very short-term trend, reacts quickly to price changes.
EMA 15 (#00bcd4, Light Blue, linewidth 4) → Short-term trend, smoother than EMA 8.
EMA 40 (#e91e63, Magenta, linewidth 4) → Medium-term trend, useful for swing trading signals.
EMA 200 (#ff9800, Orange, linewidth 4) → Long-term trend, commonly used to identify overall market direction.
EMA 400 (#2862ff, Blue, linewidth 4) → Very long-term trend, often used as a strong support/resistance guide.
The script provides clear, color-coded moving averages with bold line widths for better visibility on charts.