COG SSMACD COL combo with ADX Filter [orion35]This indicator consists of a combination of indicators produced by the most valuable developers in the market.
These are: Center of Gravity (COG) and Super Smoothed MACD (SSMACD) shared by @KivancOzbilgic and Center of Linearity (COL) shared by @alexgrover
I produced this indicator by writing new conditions that compare the signals given by these indicators with each other. I re-coded the change in the thickness of the cloud from the COL indicator as the middle horizontal line with varying color intensity and type. I have provided options for switching between these three indicators when desired.
Note: The strongest signals in the indicator are the blue colored triangles. Moderately strong ones are yellow signals. White colored signals are considered as the weakest signals.
Some minor fixes:
Some confusing words were thrown in the alarms section,
Added new alarm codes for any Triple or Double signals.
Major changes have been made with this update.
It is very important to know the direction and strength of the trend in financial markets. Therefore, ADX (Average Directional movement index) was developed by J. Welles Wilder in 1978 as an indicator of the trend strength in the prices of a financial instrument.
Especially in sideways markets, most indicators produce many false signals. However, these signals can be filtered with the ADX indicator. The price is considered sideways when the ADX is less than 20 as the threshold value.
With this update,
ADX filter can be activated when desired, and signals can be filtered flexibly according to the "threshold" value determined by the user. When the ADX filter is active, it will also reflect on the alarm conditions. Therefore, if an alarm is to be set according to the ADX filter, the filter must be activated first.
The colors of the lines and signals have been made changeable.
The visual level and thickness of the COL line has been made adjustable.
With this update, signals can be filtered according to the MavilimW indicator developed by @KivancOzbilgic
Filter Methods:
Normal: If the price is below the BlueW line, "bull" signals are filtered out, and above "bear" signals are filtered out.
Reverse : Applies the opposite of the normal method.
Fixed some visual bugs in switching between indicators.
Search in scripts for "horizontal line"
Round numbers above and below(Forex) (Original by DavitBrunet)Round number indicator that draws horizontal lines at each 50 pips for Forex.
The original indicator is developed by DavitBrunet and I have modified enabling to select line style, line color and line width.
Original: ROUND-NUMBERS-INDICATOR-BY-DAVID-BRUNET
  
Thank you @DavitBrunet for inspiring me!
----------------------
50pips 刻みのキリ番を表示するインジケーターです。(対象は為替商品のみ)
DavitBrunet氏作成のインジケーター"ROUND-NUMBERS-INDICATOR-BY-DAVID-BRUNET"をライン種類、ライン色、ラインの太さを選択できるように変更しました。
オリジナル: ROUND-NUMBERS-INDICATOR-BY-DAVID-BRUNET
  
Horizontal LevelsBasic and simple script to plot horizontal lines on chart based on manually entered levels.
Realtime Delta Volume Action [LucF]█  OVERVIEW 
This indicator displays on-chart, realtime, delta volume and delta ticks information for each bar. It aims to provide traders who trade price action on small timeframes with volume and tick information gathered as updates come in the chart's feed. It builds its own candles, which are optimized to display volume delta information. It only works in realtime.
█  WARNING 
This script is intended for traders who can already profitably trade discretionary on small timeframes. The high cost in fees and the excitement of trading at small timeframes have ruined many newcomers to trading. While trading at small timeframes can work magic for adrenaline junkies in search of thrills rather than profits, I DO NOT recommend it to most traders. Only seasoned discretionary traders able to factor in the relatively high cost of such a trading practice can ever hope to take money out of markets in that type of environment, and I would venture they account for an infinitesimal percentage of traders. If you are a newcomer to trading, AVOID THIS TOOL AT ALL COSTS — unless you are interested in experimenting with the interpretation of volume delta combined with price action. No tool currently available on TradingView provides this type of close monitoring of volume delta information, but if you are not already trading small timeframes profitably, please do not let yourself become convinced that it is the missing piece you needed. Avoid becoming a sucker who only contributes by providing liquidity to markets.
The information calculated by the indicator cannot be saved on charts, nor can it be recalculated from historical bars.
If you refresh the chart or restart the script, the accumulated information will be lost.
█  FEATURES 
 Key values 
The script displays the following key values:
 • Above the bar: ticks delta (DT), the total ticks for the bar, the percentage of total ticks that DT represents (DT%)
 • Below the bar: volume delta (DV), the total volume for the bar, the percentage of total volume that DV represents (DV%).
 Candles 
Candles are composed of four components:
 1. A top shaped like this: ┴, and a bottom shaped like this: ┬ (picture a normal Japanese candle without a body outline; the values used are the same).
 2. The candle bodies are filled with the bull/bear color representing the polarity of DV. The intensity of the body's color is determined by the DV% value. 
   When DV% is 100, the intensity of the fill is brightest. This plays well in interpreting the body colors, as the smaller, less significant DV% values will produce less vivid colors.
 3. The bright-colored borders of the candle bodies occur on "strong bars", i.e., bars meeting the criteria selected in the script's inputs, which you can configure.
 4. The POC line is a small horizontal line that appears to the left of the candle. It is the volume-weighted average of all price updates during the bar.
 Calculations 
This script monitors each realtime update of the chart's feed. It first determines if price has moved up or down since the last update. The polarity of the price change, in turn, determines the polarity of the volume and tick for that specific update. If price does not move between consecutive updates, then the last known polarity is used. Using this method, we can calculate a running volume delta and ticks delta for the bar, which becomes the bar's final delta values when the bar closes (you can inspect values of elapsed realtime bars in the Data Window or the indicator's values). Note that these values will all reset if the script re-executes because of a change in inputs or a chart refresh.
While this method of calculating is not perfect, it is by far the most precise way of calculating volume delta available on TradingView at the moment. Calculating more precise results would require scripts to have access to tick data from any chart timeframe. Charts at seconds timeframes do use exchange/broker ticks when the feeds you are using allow for it, and this indicator will run on them, but tick data is not yet available from higher timeframes. Also, note that the method used in this script is far superior to the intrabar inspection technique used on historical bars in my other "Delta Volume" indicators. This is because volume and ticks delta here are calculated from many more realtime updates than the available intrabars in history. Unfortunately, the calculation method used here cannot be used on historical bars, where intrabar inspection remains, in my opinion, the optimal method.
 Inputs 
The script's inputs provide many ways to personalize all the components: what is displayed, the colors used to display the information, and the marker conditions. Tooltips provide details for many of the inputs; I leave their exploration to you.
 Markers 
Markers provide a way for you to identify the points of interest of your choice on the chart. You control the set of conditions that trigger each of the five available markers.
You select conditions by entering, in the field for each marker, the number of each condition you want to include, separated by a comma. The conditions are:
  1 —  The bar's polarity is up/dn.
  2 —  `close` rises/falls ("rises" means it is higher than its value on the previous bar).
  3 —  DV's polarity is +/–.
  4 —  DV% rises (↕).
  5 —  POC rises/falls.
  6 —  The quantity of realtime updates rises (↕).
  7 —  DV > limit (You specify the limit in the inputs. Since DV can be +/–, DV– must be less than `–limit` for a short marker).
  8 —  DV% > limit (↕).
  9 —  DV+ rises for a long marker, DV– falls for a short.
 10 —  Consecutive DV+/DV– on two bars.
 11 —  Total volume rises (↕).
 12 —  DT's polarity is +/–.
 13 —  DT% rises (↕).
 14 —  DT+ rises for a long marker, DT– falls for a short.
Conditions showing the (↕) symbol do not have symmetrical states; they act more like filters. If you only include condition 4 in a marker's setup, for example, both long and short markers will trigger on bars where DV% rises. To trigger only long or short markers, you must add a condition providing directional differentiation, such as conditions 1 or 2. Accordingly, you would enter "1,4" or "2,4".
For a marker to trigger, ALL the conditions you specified for it must be met. Long markers appear on the chart as "Mx▲" signs under the values displayed below candles. Short markers display "Mx▼" over the number of updates displayed above candles. The marker's number will replace the "x" in "Mx▲". The script loads with five markers that will not trigger because no conditions are associated with them. To activate markers, you will need to select and enter the set of conditions you require for each one.
 Alerts 
You can configure alerts on this script. They will trigger whenever one of the configured markers triggers. Alerts do not repaint, so they trigger at the bar's close—which is also when the markers will appear.
█  HOW TO USE IT 
As a rule, I do not prescribe expected use of my indicators, as traders have proved to be much more creative than me in using them. Additionally, I tend to think that if you expect detailed recommendations from me to be able to use my indicators, it's a sign you are in a precarious situation and should go back to the drawing board and master the necessary basics that will allow you to explore and decide for yourself if my indicators can be useful to you, and how you will use them. I will make an exception for this thing, as it presents fairly novel information. I will use simple logic to surmise potential uses, as contrary to most of my other indicators, I have NOT used this one to actually trade. Markets have a way of throwing wrenches in our seemingly bullet-proof rationalizing, so drive cautiously and please forgive me if the pointers I share here don't pan out.
The first thing to do is to disable your normal bars. You can do this by clicking on the eye icon that appears when you hover over the symbol's name in the upper-left corner of your chart.
The absolute value and polarity of DV mean little without perspective; that's why I include both total volume for the bar and the percentage that DV represents of that total volume. I interpret a low DV% value as indecision. If you share that opinion, you could, let's say, configure one of the markers on "DV% > 80%", for example (to do so you would enter "8" in the condition field of any marker, and "80" in the limit field for condition 8, below the marker conditions).
I also like to analyze price action on the bar with DV%. Small DV% values should often produce small candle bodies. If a small DV% value occurs on a bar with much movement and high volume, I'm thinking "tough battle with potential explosive power when one side wins". Conversely, large bodies with high DV% mean that large volume is breaching through multiple levels, or that nobody is suddenly willing to take the other side of a normal volume of trades.
I find the POC lines really interesting. First, they tell us the price point where the most significant action (taking into account both price occurrences AND volume) during the bar occurred. Second, they can be useful when compared against past values. Third, their color helps us in figuring out which ones are the most significant. Unsurprisingly, bunches of orange POCs tend to appear in consolidation zones, in pauses, and before reversals. It may be useful to often focus more on POC progression than on `close` values. This is not to say that OHLC values are not useful; looking, as is customary, for higher highs or lower lows, or for repeated tests of precise levels can of course still be useful. I do like how POCs add another dimension to chart readings.
What should you do with the ticks delta above bars? Old-time ticker tape readers paid attention to the sounds coming from it (the "ticker" moniker actually comes from the sound they made). They knew activity was picking up when the frequency of the "ticks" increased. My thinking is that the total number of ticks will help you in the same way, since increasing updates usually mean growing interest—and thus perhaps price movement, as increasing volatility or volume would lead us to surmise. Ticks delta can help you figure out when proportionally large, random orders come in from traders with other perspectives than the short-term price action you are typically working with when you use this tool. Just as volume delta, ticks delta are one more informational component that can help you confirm convergence when building your opinions on price action.
What are strong bars? They are an attempt to identify significance. They are like a default marker, except that instead of displaying "Mx▲/▼" below/above the bar, the candle's body is outlined in bright bull/bear color when one is detected. Strong bars require a respectable amount of conditions to be met (you can see and re-configure them in the inputs). Think of them as pushes rather than indications of an upcoming, strong and multi-bar move. Pushes do, for sure, often occur at the beginning of strong trends. You will often see a few strong bars occur at 2-3 bar intervals at the beginning or middle of trends. But they also tend to occur at tops/bottoms, which makes their interpretation problematic. Another pattern that you will see quite frequently is a final strong bar in the direction of the trend, followed a few bars later by another strong bar in the reverse direction. My summary analyses seemed to indicate these were perhaps good points where one could make a bet on an early, risky reversal entry.
The last piece of information displayed by the indicator is the color of the candle bodies. Three possible colors are used. Bull/bear is determined by the polarity of DV, but only when the bar's polarity matches that of DV. When it doesn't, the color is the divergence color (orange, by default). Whichever color is used for the body, its intensity is determined by the DV% value. Maximum intensity occurs when DV%=100, so the more significant DV% values generate more noticeable colors. Body colors can be useful when looking to confirm the convergence of other components. The visual effect this creates hopefully makes it easier to detect patterns on the chart.
One obvious methodology that comes to mind to trade with this tool would be to use another indicator like  Technical Ratings  at a higher timeframe to identify the larger context's trend, and then use this tool to identify entries for short-term trades in that direction.
█  NOTES AND RAMBLINGS 
 Instant Calculations 
This indicator uses instant values calculated on the bar only. No moving averages or calculations involving historical periods are used. The only exception to this rule is in some of the marker conditions like "Two consecutive DV+ values", where information from the previous bar is used.
 Trading Small vs Long Timeframes 
I never trade discretionary at the 5sec–5min timeframes this indicator was designed to be used with; I trade discretionary at 1D, 1W and 1M timeframes, and let systems trade at smaller timeframes. The higher the timeframe you trade at, the fewer fees you will pay because you trade less and are not churning trading volume, as is inevitable at smaller timeframes. Trading at higher timeframes is also a good way to gain an instant edge on most of the trading crowd that has its nose to the ground and often tends to forget the big picture. It also makes for a much less demanding trading practice, where you have lots of time to research and build your long-term opinions on potential future outcomes. While the future is always uncertain, I believe trades riding on long-term trends have stronger underlying support from the reality outside markets.
To traders who will ask why I publish an indicator designed for small timeframes, let me say that my main purpose here is to showcase what can be done with Pine. I often see comments by coders who are obviously not aware of what Pine is capable of in 2021. Since its humble beginnings seven years ago, Pine has grown and become a serious programming language. TradingView's growing popularity and its ongoing commitment to keep Pine accessible to newcomers to programming is gradually making Pine more and more of a standard in indicator and strategy programming. The technical barriers to entry for traders interested in owning their trading practice by developing their personal tools to trade have never been so low. I am also publishing this script because I value volume delta information, and I present here what I think is an original way of analyzing it.
 Performance 
The script puts a heavy load on the Pine runtime and the charting engine. After running the script for a while, you will often notice your chart becoming less responsive, and your chart tab can take longer to activate when you go back to it after using other tabs. That is the reason I encourage you to set the number of historical values displayed on bars to the minimum that meets your needs. When your chart becomes less responsive because the script has been running on it for many hours, refreshing the browser tab will restart everything and bring the chart's speed back up. You will then lose the information displayed on elapsed bars.
 Neutral Volume 
This script represents a departure from the way I have previously calculated volume delta in my scripts. I used the notion of "neutral volume" when inspecting intrabar timeframes, for bars where price did not move. No longer. While this had little impact when using intrabar inspection because the minimum usable timeframe was 1min (where bars with zero movement are relatively infrequent), a more precise way was required to handle realtime updates, where multiple consecutive prices often have the same value. This will usually happen whenever orders are unable to move across the bid/ask levels, either because of slow action or because a large-volume bid/ask level is taking time to breach. In either case, the proper way to calculate the polarity of volume delta for those updates is to use the last known polarity, which is how I calculate now.
 The Order Book 
Without access to the order book's levels (the depth of market), we are limited to analyzing transactions that come in the TradingView feed for the chart. That does not mean the volume delta information calculated this way is irrelevant; on the contrary, much of the information calculated here is not available in trading consoles supplied by exchanges/brokers. Yet it's important to realize that without access to the order book, you are forfeiting the valuable information that can be gleaned from it. The order book's levels are always in movement, of course, and some of the information they contain is mere posturing, i.e., attempts to influence the behavior of other players in the market by traders/systems who will often remove their orders when price comes near their order levels. Nonetheless, the order book is an essential tool for serious traders operating at intraday timeframes. It can be used to time entries/exits, to explain the causes of particular price movements, to determine optimal stop levels, to get to know the traders/systems you are betting against (they tend to exhibit behavioral patterns only recognizable through the order book), etc. This tool in no way makes the order book less useful; I encourage all intraday traders to become familiar with it and avoid trading without one.
Trader Pressure Index (TPX)This is my take on the script by RedK
I kept the algorithm exactly the same, but changed the layout and the default look back period. Most important is that the resulting line, the TPX, is now a histogram with green and red staves.
To put the histogram on a logical place in the graph, I changed the way the control/dominance level is implemented, it now lowers or highers the whole graph, this way the zero level becomes the ‘no interest’ level. 
I added two horizontal lines at a distance of 40 because I feel that this is sort of an oversold / overbought indication. In practice not very convincing, but provides a visual comparison.
In this layout I explain that grass is growing on bull hills peaking up behind the foreground and blood is dripping from the bear hills.
Enjoy.
Fibonacci Extension / Retracement / Pivot Points by DGTFɪʙᴏɴᴀᴄᴄɪ Exᴛᴇɴᴛɪᴏɴ / Rᴇᴛʀᴀᴄᴍᴇɴᴛ / Pɪᴠᴏᴛ Pᴏɪɴᴛꜱ 
This study combines various Fibonacci concepts into one, and some basic volume and volatility indications 
█    Pɪᴠᴏᴛ Pᴏɪɴᴛꜱ  — is a technical indicator that is used to determine the levels at which price may face support or resistance. The Pivot Points indicator consists of a pivot point (PP) level and several support (S) and resistance (R) levels. PP, resistance and support values are calculated in different ways, depending on the type of the indicator, this study implements Fibonacci Pivot Points 
The indicator resolution is set by the input of the Pivot Points TF (Timeframe). If the Pivot Points TF is set to AUTO (the default value), then the increased resolution is determined by the following algorithm:
   for intraday resolutions up to and including 5 min, 4HOURS (4H) is used
   for intraday resolutions more than 5 min and up to and including 45 min, DAY (1D) is used
   for intraday resolutions more than 45 min and up to and including 4 hour, WEEK (1W) is used
   for daily resolutions MONTH is used (1M)
   for weekly resolutions, 3-MONTH (3M) is used
   for monthly resolutions, 12-MONTH (12M) is used
If the Pivot Points TF is set to User Defined, users may choose any higher timeframe of their preference 
█   Fɪʙ Rᴇᴛʀᴀᴄᴇᴍᴇɴᴛ  — Fibonacci retracements is a popular instrument used by technical analysts to determine support and resistance areas. In technical analysis, this tool is created by taking two extreme points (usually a peak and a trough) on the chart and dividing the vertical distance by the key Fibonacci coefficients equal to 23.6%, 38.2%, 50%, 61.8%, and 100%. This study implements an automated method of identifying the pivot lows/highs and automatically draws  horizontal lines that are used to determine possible support and resistance levels
█    Fɪʙᴏɴᴀᴄᴄɪ Exᴛᴇɴꜱɪᴏɴꜱ  — Fibonacci extensions are a tool that traders can use to establish profit targets or estimate how far a price may travel AFTER a retracement/pullback is finished. Extension levels are also possible areas where the price may reverse. This study implements an automated method of identifying the pivot lows/highs and automatically draws  horizontal lines that are used to determine possible support and resistance levels. 
 IMPORTANT NOTE:   Fibonacci extensions option may require to do further adjustment of the study parameters for proper usage. Extensions are aimed to be used when a trend is present and they aim to measure how far a price may travel AFTER a retracement/pullback. I will strongly suggest users of this study to check the education post for further details,  where to use extensions and where to use retracements  
Important input options for both Fibonacci Extensions and Retracements 
Deviation, is a multiplier that affects how much the price should deviate from the previous pivot in order for the bar to become a new pivot. Increasing its value is one way to get higher timeframe Fib Retracement Levels
Depth, affects the minimum number of bars that will be taken into account when building
█   Volume / Volatility Add-Ons 
   High Volatile Bar Indication 
   Volume Spike Bar Indication 
   Volume Weighted Colored Bars 
This study benefits from build-in auto fib retracement tv study and modifications applied to get extentions and also to fit this combo
 Disclaimer:  
Trading success is all about following your trading strategy and the indicators should fit within your trading strategy, and not to be traded upon solely
The script is for informational and educational purposes only. Use of the script does not constitute professional and/or financial advice. You alone have the sole responsibility of evaluating the script output and risks associated with the use of the script. In exchange for using the script, you agree not to hold dgtrd TradingView user liable for any possible claim for damages arising from any decision you make based on use of the script
Phoenix085-Studies-PerCentage Current Price ((fib-pivot-%))Misc Details : 
Another Indicator and Totally my own concept... 
If others have similar study already then Credit to them for coming up with this even before I did but this is just me fiddling with pinescript trying to paint my dream like a great man once said... 
 Background :
I am a strong believer of Market being Fractals and what best way to script it than Pivots.
So I just wanted to identify the Pivot High and Pivot Low of some period(in the script it is set to 500, please do play with it to get the best setting which captures atleast the major highs and lows of recent past)
I also think that Fibonacci levels are very crucial and so wanted to see how the market reacts at the Fibonacci ratios from Pivot High and Low.
Overview :
As said above the price at Pivot Low is considered as 0% on the graph and Value at Pivot High as the 100%.
Depending on the CMP, the thick white line is plotted... 
The main thing of interest here is the Horizontal lines are Fib Levels and the market kinda reacts around those levels as the buyers and sellers have to come to equilibrium... 
A price retracing from the 100% level just means Double Top = Sell(Probable) and a bounce from the 0% just means a double bottom = Buy(Probable).... 
Also this indicator along with my other Public indicator() might give a better understanding of the price actions (I Hope)... 
This is free to use and share with as many as you like... 
Credits:  
All the great people who have greatly influenced and still continue to do so... 
@JustUncleL
@BigBitsIO
@TheArtofTrading
@QuantNomad
@SquigglesNiggles and many many many more
Vertical Line Timezones Chris ChapmanVertical Line Time zones Chris Chapman
Just to speed up the drawing process and for the horizontal lines 
Pivot Support and Resistance Finder [JV] V1Hi Traders.
This is my first attempt of writing an indicator.
Let me start by saying I could never have done this without lmatl and WMX_Q_System_Trading who were and are an incredible source of inspiration.
This indicator shows horizontal Pivot Support and Resistance . It draws up to 4 horizontal lines extending to the right from and adds labels to High and Low Pivot Candles . It also draws the Support / Resistance that is currently forming.
You can select the number of lines on the current timeframe.
There are some options in Settings:
 
  Current timeframe pivot settings
  Show and hide levels of the current timeframe
  Change colors
  Extend Lines
 
Any suggestions are more than welcome!
I also welcome donations, no matter how small ;-)
Price breaksThis indicator displays the High/Low/Close of the previous day/week/month as horizontal lines.  Of course, everything is configurable but to keep it simple and non-intrusive it only displays:
 
  month's H/L/C levels on D time frame (drawn as circles)
  week's levels on 4h (as crosses)
  day's levels on 1h (as line)
 
These levels  act as support / resistance over and over again, see current (08/24/2020) BTCUSD chart, the previous month's close (blue circles) did act as support and held on 08/11, also prev month's high (red circles) was not broken on 08/21. Once these levels break we might see lower prices but so far both of them act as good support to consider.
Percent Calculator OverlayFirst and foremost: I'm inspired to publish my scripts by the other member's who publish quality, detailed scripts -a token of my appreciation and support, Thank You.
The percent calculator overlay is an extension of my Percent Calculator indicator that allows one to visualize the percent metrics they're interested in trading: it''s function is to simply output the target price from either the close or ones trade-entry based on a desired percent return on investment (R.O.I.) then plots it on top of the chart as an area plot and notes anytime in the past the desired conditions were met with a {flag "Success"}.
Say you want to profit 15% from your entry: open the settings and plug in your entry value and the number 15 into the appropriate settings and the indicator displays what the target price should be (rounded to two decimal places) right on the chart with the area as well as the horizontal line which is enabled by the "track price" setting.
The percent calculator overlay also goes one step further by finding the average percent return on investment over a desired interval of time (the default is 20 candles) as well as allows one to adjust the size of the price move the average percent return on investment is being calculated for which is displayed on the chart as circles and also displays a horizontal line for the most current value with the enabled "track price" setting.
      NOTE: unlike the Percent Calculator the Percent Calculator Overlay creates a visual record of the number of success' the programmed parameters have achieved (based on the closing prices) which self adjusts when the "size of the move" is changed. 
Say you want to find the average percent return on investment for a 3 candle swing over a 200 candle interval of time: open the settings and plug the number 200 into the interval setting and the number 3 into the price-move setting and the indicator displays what the average 3 candle swing returns on investment and plots what the target price would be to achieve the average return given the current close (or entry price) with the gray circles and the horizontal line enabled with the "track price" setting.
Practical Application: comparing ones desired return on investment to the average return on investment can help determine how realistic ones goals are... it's unlikely to achieve 100% return on investment if the average is only around 10% (given the parameters one is working within) but on the other hand achieving 5% return on investment is highly likely. By visualizing roughly how often the given parameters have achieved success on the chart one can become a lot more comfortable, confident, and accurate with their goals.
Forward Looking Statement: I believe in the not too distant future plug and play automated trading systems will be made available to the general public. Over the past 4 years we have seen brokers offer free charting software, commission free trading, and now fractional shares; I don't think it will be much longer before we can simply click a few buttons and tell the computer to enter when the stochastic is overbought/sold and exit with a predefined percent gain (and to repeat that process indefinitely).  -Imagine the data moving 2-3-4 times a second, the liquidity flowing like Niagara falls, and 95% of the working population not only starting to invest but gains the extra cash flow they desperately need. 
Beta testing: please comment or send me a message if you happen to stumble over any bugs or have any suggestions for improvement.
Engulfing Detector (Supply and Demand)Bullish and bearish engulfing candles marked with horizontal lines around engulfed candle.
This indicator can be used to assist in locating potential supply and demand zones.
The fresh zones will be of green and red line colors and the tested zone lines are grey in color.
12LineA horizontal line is displayed during Nikkei 225 futures trading to help you draw a line quickly.
If you check the check box, you can display up to 12 lines of 6 types at the entered price.
日経平均先物取引時に水平ラインを表示し、素早いライン描画を助けます。
表示したい価格を入力し、チェックボックスをONにすると6種類の線を最大12本表示できます。
BTC Hash Rate & Price Stochastic IndiciatorFresh off the press, we have a new breed of indicators: Bitcoin's Hash Rate & Price.
As many of you have read, roughly 80% of BTC's price movements can be correlated to its changes in hash rate volume. I decided to make a stochastic indicator that utilizes this principle to track divergence of the price from the hash rate.
Let's break this down...
In red is the CLOSE of BTC's Price,  which is then smoothed by a SMA, and smoothed again by a WMA.
In aqua is a STOCH of BTC's Hash Rate, which is then smoothed by a SMA, and smoothed again by a WMA.
The reason why I chose to use the CLOSE of the Price versus a STOCH as I did with the Hash Rate, is because the price tends to signal trends via divergence from the Hash Rate, and eventually converge with the Hash Rate at some point. 
You will notice that anytime there is a significant  divergence  of the RED from the AQUA, a trend is closely aligned with it. This indicator does a  remarkable  job of indicating the beginnings and ends of both bullish and bearish price movements.
Example Strategy:
Enter long when RED (price) crosses over AQUA (hash rate), and close long when RED crosses under AQUA.
The inverse can be done for shorts, just RED diverges downwards from AQUA versus upwards.
Note:
Unlike a normal Stochastic Indicator, the upper and lower bounds do not appear to hold any significance. In other words, the lines do not seem to reverse at 20/80. As a result, I just set them to 0/100 for aesthetics.
DO NOT make trades based off of small divergences, or simply enter into positions based off the price divergences. Though this indicator times the start/end of movements very accurately, it also comes riddled with  false breakouts .
Proceed at your own pace, and please, toy around with the inputs values. I experimented with a few combinations, but I'm sure there are better value combinations that yield sharper results with fewer false signals.
EASTER EGG:
Notice the "Golden Line"? Any avid user of TV knows that Fibonacci ratios show up  everywhere  in markets. With that said, I plotted a horizontal line at 0.618, which is 1/Phi, an important level in Fibonacci retracements.
Final Comments:
First, this is not investment, merely my experimentation and observation of happenings in the analytical world.
Second, please comment questions, improvements, etc. Dialogue opens up room for exploration!
Market StructureSimple script to Plot Horizontal Lines at turning points of the market. Often times, these key levels can indicate a potential trade when price breaks above/below.
Iconik Trading Suite: Auto Support/Resistance - WeeklyAutogeneration of support and resistance lines. Posts a horizontal line of the open/close for the past 40 weekly candles.
DM for a PowerPoint describing this indicator and the rest of Iconik in detail.
Iconik Trading Suite Indicator List:
ITS-OSC: Oscillators (v2)
ITS-PAA: Price Action Alerts (v2)
ITS-ASR: Auto Support/Resistance
-> Daily (v2)
-> 3 Day (v2)
-> Weekly (v2)
ITS-4TFC: 4 Time Frame Confirmation (v1)
ITS-DIV: Divergence Seeker (v1)
Iconik Trading Suite: Auto Support/Resistance - 3 DayAutogeneration of support and resistance lines. Posts a horizontal line of the open/close for the past 40 3 Day candles.
DM for a PowerPoint describing this indicator and the rest of Iconik in detail.
Iconik Trading Suite Indicator List:
ITS-OSC: Oscillators (v2)
ITS-PAA: Price Action Alerts (v2)
ITS-ASR: Auto Support/Resistance
-> Daily (v2)
-> 3 Day (v2)
-> Weekly (v2)
ITS-4TFC: 4 Time Frame Confirmation (v1)
ITS-DIV: Divergence Seeker (v1)
Iconik Trading Suite: Auto Support/Resistance - DailyAutogeneration of support and resistance lines. Posts a horizontal line of the open/close for the past 40 daily candles.
DM for a PowerPoint describing this indicator and the rest of Iconik in detail.
Iconik Trading Suite Indicator List:
ITS-OSC: Oscillators (v2)
ITS-PAA: Price Action Alerts (v2)
ITS-ASR: Auto Support/Resistance
-> Daily (v2)
-> 3 Day (v2)
-> Weekly (v2)
ITS-4TFC: 4 Time Frame Confirmation (v1)
ITS-DIV: Divergence Seeker (v1)
MS MONEY CCI SQUEEZEAbout 
I have used this indicator to find many lucrative opportunities. This indicator takes the moving average of CCI in custom, volatility-specific conditions. CCI measures "overbought" in the red-shaded region and "Oversold" in the green-shaded region. The shaded regions do not constitute a buy/sell signal alone, the MS CCI Squeeze is best used when market conditions agree and is best used when the user has fundamental reasoning for "reversal-like" situations to align. The MS CCI Squeeze will soon have a synergistic partner called "MS RSI Squeeze" indicator that will look similar to help better measure volatility and strength trend. 
 About the Commodity Channel Index (CCI) 
The commodity channel index (CCI) is an oscillator originally introduced by Donald Lambert in 1980. Since its introduction, the indicator has grown in popularity and is now a very common tool for traders in identifying cyclical trends not only in commodities, but also equities (stocks) and currency trading.
 How to set an Alert 
If the user wants to  set an alert , click on one of the support/ resistance lines (black-dashed) near the zero mark. Clicking on the horizontal line above or below the zero line will populate a yellow arrow which will allow you to set alerts when wanted.
 Please Read For Better Efficiency 
 When using this indicator, keep an eye out for harmonic patterns, both bullish and bearish head and shoulders patterns for "HIDDEN" breakout opportunities. 
 Please like, follow and share and I will continue building better indicators. 
MACD PercentageJust the macd not using the raw difference between the 12 and 26 ema for the macd. Instead It calculates the difference in %. Histogram and signal are also derived from the macd line. Also added 2 horizontal lines, you can modify.
Feel free to use and copy the code. I also copied the source code from tradingview public script, thanks to the one who made it.
Key Levels [@treypeng]Draws horizontal lines for Daily, Hourly (1) and Weekly levels. Really handy to switch on quickly when scalping. 
Light blue: Previous hour OHLC 
Thick light blue: Previous hour Close / current hour Open 
Dark blue: Yesterday OHLC 
Thick dark blue: Yesterday Close / today Open 
Purple: Weekly Open 
It's a bit ugly, I'd prefer horizontal rays instead of lines stretching back across the chart but I couldn't figure out how to do this in PineScript. If I get it sorted, I'll publish an update. 
Pivot S/RThis support/resistance indicator draws a horizontal line at historical Daily swing points. 
I've found this to be a very accurate indicator for determining current levels of support and resistance. Double lines and clusters of lines provide particularly strong levels.
Most of the settings are changeable.






















