Search in scripts for "oscillator"
COLOUR CODED ULTIMATE OSCILLATOR WITH LEVELS (70/50/30)Just added 70/30/50 levels to @LazyBear 's "Color Coded UO" script.
Happy Trading!
Elliott Wave Oscillator w/ Signal LineI just added a signal line to Koryu's code to fit my trading style. When the signal line crosses zero, it confirms to me that it's safe to trade.
3-10 MA Oscillator (Wyckoff) by malagadev- If ControlSMA(16) exceeds 0 means market is bullish, below 0 means market is bearish.
- Difference between SMA(3,10) is represented with blue area.
- You can operate using changes in color or trend, or simply knowing that once 0 is crossed upwards, it means the pullback is proportional so we just need a simple pattern in the price or, entering after it just crosses.
- It's better to open positions in the first pullback after the ControlSMA(16) firstly crosses 0 ("First Cross").
- It's possible to operate using momentum divergences.
OBV Oscillatori like lazyBear's script.
it is also from his.
and i added ma.
that ma can help you to read volume moving direction.
i just think so.
DSS Bresser Scalper Improved by ShizaruThe original script was posted on ProRealCode by user Nicolas.
This indicator is derived from Bressert's works in market cycles (Double Smooth Stochastic). It is converted from MT4 code and it is a part of a complete trading strategy of scalping, I certainly post on forums soon.
The DSS indicator is intended to spot overbought and oversold areas with less false signals than any other stochastic indicator. When the oscillator remains longer into one of the area, it is the beginning of a trend change.
I found it useful to spot price rebound while in a already formed trend. Of course, because stochastic is most used to find price reversal over a calculated price center, this indicator can also be nicely used in ranging markets.
Credits to: www.prorealcode.com
KusKus StarlightThe original script was posted on ProRealCode by user Nicolas.
The KusKus Starlight indicator is an oscillator built using Fisher price transformation. It is also normalized over the last range periods. Smoothing can be adjusted in the parameters.
Please if you use my scripts leave a like or follow me.
Thanks!
Cosine smoothed stochasticDescription
The "Cosine Smoothed Stochastic" indicator leverages advanced Fourier Transform techniques to smooth the traditional Stochastic Oscillator. This approach enhances the signal's reliability and reduces noise, providing traders with a more refined and actionable indicator.
The Stochastic Oscillator is a popular momentum indicator that measures the current price relative to the high-low range over a specified period. It helps identify overbought and oversold conditions, signaling potential trend reversals. By smoothing this indicator with Fourier Transform techniques, we aim to reduce false signals and improve its effectiveness.
The indicator comprises three main components:
Cosine Function: A custom function to compute the cosine of an input scaled by a frequency tuner.
Kernel Function: Utilizes the cosine function to create a smooth kernel, constrained to positive values within a specific range.
Kernel Regression and Multi Cosine: Perform kernel regression over a lookback period, with the multi cosine function summing these regressions at varying frequencies for a composite smooth signal.
Additionally, the indicator includes a volume oscillator to complement the smoothed stochastic signals, providing insights into market volume trends.
Features
Fourier Transform Smoothing: Advanced smoothing technique to reduce noise.
Volume Oscillator: Dynamic volume-based oscillator for additional market insights.
Customizable Inputs: Users can configure key parameters like regression lookback period, tuning coefficient, and smoothing length.
Visual Alerts: Buy and sell signals based on smoothed stochastic crossovers.
Usage
The indicator is designed for trend-following and momentum-based trading strategies . It helps identify overbought and oversold conditions, trend reversals, and potential entry and exit points based on smoothed stochastic values and volume trends.
Inputs
Cosine Kernel Setup:
varient: Choose between "Tuneable" and "Stepped" regression types.
lookbackR: Lookback period for regression.
tuning: Tuning coefficient for frequency adjustment.
Stochastic Calculation:
volshow: Toggle to show the volume oscillator.
emalength: Smoothing period for the Stochastic Oscillator.
lookback_period, m1, m2: Parameters for the Stochastic Oscillator lookback and moving averages.
How It Works
Stochastic Oscillator:
Computes the stochastic %K and smoothes it with an EMA.
Further smoothes %K using the multi cosine function.
Volume Oscillator:
Calculates short and long EMAs of volume and derives the oscillator as the percentage difference.
Plots volume oscillator columns with dynamic coloring based on the oscillator's value and change.
Visual Representation:
Plots smoothed stochastic lines with colors indicating bullish, bearish, overbought, and oversold conditions.
Uses plotchar to mark crossovers between current and previous values of d.
Displays overbought and oversold levels with filled regions between them.
Chart Example
To understand the indicator better, refer to the clean and annotated chart provided. The script is used without additional scripts to maintain clarity. The chart includes:
Smoothed Stochastic Lines: Colored according to trend conditions.
Volume Oscillator: Plotted as columns for visual volume trend analysis.
Overbought/Oversold Levels: Clearly marked levels with filled regions between them.
Alert Conditions
The indicator sets up alerts for buy and sell signals when the smoothed stochastic crosses over or under its previous value. These alerts can be used for automated trading systems or manual trading signals.
breakthrough of the indicators method :
Initialization and Inputs:
The indicator starts by defining necessary inputs, such as the lookback period for regression, tuning coefficient, and smoothing parameters for the Stochastic Oscillator and volume oscillator.
Cosine Function and Kernel Creation:
The cosine function is defined to compute the cosine of an input scaled by a frequency tuner.
The kernel function utilizes this cosine function to create a smoothing kernel, which is constrained to positive values within a specific range.
Kernel Regression:
The kernel regression function iterates over the lookback period, calculating weighted sums of the source values using the kernel function. This produces a smoothed value by dividing the accumulated weighted values by the total weights.
Multi Cosine Smoothing:
The multi cosine function combines multiple kernel regressions at different frequencies, summing these results and averaging them to achieve a composite smoothed value.
Stochastic Calculation and Smoothing:
The traditional Stochastic Oscillator is calculated, and its %K value is smoothed using an EMA.
The smoothed %K is further refined using the multi cosine function, resulting in a more reliable and less noisy signal.
Volume Oscillator Calculation:
The volume oscillator calculates short and long EMAs of the volume and derives the oscillator as the percentage difference between these EMAs. The result is plotted with dynamic coloring to indicate volume trends.
Plotting and Alerts:
The indicator plots the smoothed stochastic lines , overbought/oversold levels, and volume oscillator on the chart.
Buy and sell alerts are set up based on crossovers of the smoothed stochastic values, providing traders with actionable signals.
Dual Stochastic with Trend FilterThe "Dual Stochastic with Trend Filter" is an oscillator indicator designed to provide clearer, trend-aligned trading signals. It uses two distinct stochastic oscillators to identify potential entry points and incorporates an optional EMA-based trend filter to ensure that you are trading in the direction of the broader market momentum.
How It Works and How to Use It
This indicator combines two key technical analysis concepts: momentum (via stochastics) and trend (via moving averages).
Core Components:
Dual Stochastic Oscillators:
Signal Line 1 (Blue): A standard stochastic oscillator.
Signal Line 2 (Red): A second stochastic oscillator, often using a different source (like hlcc4) to provide a smoother, more reliable signal.
A buy signal is generated when the Blue Line (d1) crosses above the Red Line (d2).
A sell signal is generated when the Blue Line (d1) crosses below the Red Line (d2).
Trend Filter (Optional):
This feature uses a fast and a slow Exponential Moving Average (EMA) to determine the overall market trend.
When the fast EMA is above the slow EMA, the background will turn green, indicating an uptrend.
When the fast EMA is below the slow EMA, the background will turn red, indicating a downtrend.
This filter can be toggled on or off in the indicator settings.
How to Use:
With Trend Filter Enabled (Recommended):
Long (Buy) Entry: Look for a green triangle buy signal (▲). This signal only appears when:
The Blue Signal Line crosses above the Red Signal Line.
The market is in a confirmed uptrend (green background).
Short (Sell) Entry: Look for a red triangle sell signal (▼). This signal only appears when:
The Blue Signal Line crosses below the Red Signal Line.
The market is in a confirmed downtrend (red background).
Exit Signal:
A yellow circle (●) appears to suggest closing an open trade. This signal is triggered for a long position if either the stochastics have a bearish cross or the trend flips to a downtrend. Conversely, for a short position, it's triggered by a bullish stochastic cross or a trend flip to an uptrend.
With Trend Filter Disabled:
If you turn off the "Use Trend Filter" option, the indicator will function as a simple dual stochastic crossover system.
A green triangle (▲) will appear every time the Blue Line crosses above the Red Line.
A red triangle (▼) will appear every time the Blue Line crosses below the Red Line.
The background coloring and exit signals based on trend flips will be deactivated. This mode is more sensitive but may produce more false signals in choppy markets.
Key Visuals:
Blue Line: The primary signal line.
Red Line: The secondary, often smoother, signal line.
Green Triangle (▲): Bullish entry signal.
Red Triangle (▼): Bearish entry signal.
Yellow Circle (●): Suggested trade exit/stop.
Green/Red Background: Visual confirmation of the current uptrend or downtrend.
By filtering stochastic signals with the dominant trend, this indicator helps traders avoid common pitfalls like entering short positions during a strong uptrend or buying into a bearish market. This alignment of momentum and trend is key to improving signal quality.
Disclaimer
This indicator is provided for educational and informational purposes only and should not be considered as financial advice or a recommendation to buy or sell any asset. All trading and investment decisions are your own sole responsibility.
Trading financial markets involves a high level of risk, and you may lose more than your initial investment. Past performance is not indicative of future results. The signals generated by this indicator are not guaranteed to be accurate, and you should always use this tool in conjunction with other forms of analysis and sound risk management practices.
Before using this indicator in a live trading environment, it is strongly recommended that you backtest it thoroughly and practice with it on a demo account. The author is not responsible for any financial losses you may incur from using this script.
Divergence for Many Panel (D4MP+)Divergence for Many Panel (D4MP+)
This Divergence for Many Panel indicator is built upon the realtme divergence drawing code originally authored by LonesomeTheBlue, now in the form of a panel indicator.
The available oscillators, hand picked for their ability to identify high quality divergences currently include:
- Ultimate Oscillator (UO)
- True Strength Index (TSI)
- Money Flow Index (MFI)
- Relative Strength Index (RSI)
- Stochastic RSI
- Time Segmented Volume (TSV)
- Cumulative Delta Volume (CDV)
Note : this list of available oscillators may be added to or altered at a later date.
The indicator includes the following features:
- Ability to select any of the above oscillators
- Optional divergence lines drawn directly onto the oscillator in realtime .
- Configurable alerts to notify you when divergences occur.
- Configurable pivot lookback periods to fine tune the divergences drawn in order to suit different trading styles and timeframes, including the ability to enable automatic adjustment of pivot period per chart timeframe.
- Background colouring option to indicate when the selected oscillator has crossed above or below its centerline.
- Alternate timeframe feature allows you to configure the oscillator to use data from a different timeframe than the chart it is loaded on.
- Oscillator name label, so you can clearly see which oscillator is selected, in the case you have multiple loaded onto a chart.
- Optional adjustable range bands.
- Automatic adjustment of line colours, centerlines and range band levels on a per oscillator basis by default.
- Ability to customise the colours of each of the oscillators.
What is the Ultimate Oscillator ( UO )?
“The Ultimate Oscillator indicator (UO) indicator is a technical analysis tool used to measure momentum across three varying timeframes. The problem with many momentum oscillators is that after a rapid advance or decline in price, they can form false divergence trading signals. For example, after a rapid rise in price, a bearish divergence signal may present itself, however price continues to rise. The ultimate Oscillator attempts to correct this by using multiple timeframes in its calculation as opposed to just one timeframe which is what is used in most other momentum oscillators.”
What is the True Strength Index ( TSI )?
"The true strength index (TSI) is a technical momentum oscillator used to identify trends and reversals. The indicator may be useful for determining overbought and oversold conditions, indicating potential trend direction changes via centerline or signal line crossovers, and warning of trend weakness through divergence."
What is the Money Flow Index ( MFI )?
“The Money Flow Index ( MFI ) is a technical oscillator that uses price and volume data for identifying overbought or oversold signals in an asset. It can also be used to spot divergences which warn of a trend change in price. The oscillator moves between 0 and 100. Unlike conventional oscillators such as the Relative Strength Index ( RSI ), the Money Flow Index incorporates both price and volume data, as opposed to just price. For this reason, some analysts call MFI the volume-weighted RSI .”
What is the Relative Strength Index ( RSI )?
"The relative strength index (RSI) is a momentum indicator used in technical analysis. RSI measures the speed and magnitude of a security's recent price changes to evaluate overvalued or undervalued conditions in the price of that security. The RSI can do more than point to overbought and oversold securities. It can also indicate securities that may be primed for a trend reversal or corrective pullback in price. It can signal when to buy and sell. Traditionally, an RSI reading of 70 or above indicates an overbought situation. A reading of 30 or below indicates an oversold condition. It is also commonly used to identify divergences."
What is the Stochastic RSI (StochRSI)?
"The Stochastic RSI (StochRSI) is an indicator used in technical analysis that ranges between zero and one (or zero and 100 on some charting platforms) and is created by applying the Stochastic oscillator formula to a set of relative strength index (RSI) values rather than to standard price data. Using RSI values within the Stochastic formula gives traders an idea of whether the current RSI value is overbought or oversold. The StochRSI oscillator was developed to take advantage of both momentum indicators in order to create a more sensitive indicator that is attuned to a specific security's historical performance rather than a generalized analysis of price change."
What Is Time Segmented Volume?
"Time segmented volume (TSV) is a technical analysis indicator developed by Worden Brothers Inc. that segments a stock's price and volume according to specific time intervals. The price and volume data is then compared to uncover periods of accumulation (buying) and distribution (selling)."
What is Cumulative Volume Delta ( CDV )?
"The CDV analyses the net buying at market price and net selling at market price. This means, that volume delta is measuring whether it is the buyers or sellers that are more aggressive in taking the current market price. It measures the degree of intent by buyers and sellers, which can be used to indicate who is more dominant. The CDV can be used to help identify possible trends and also divergences"
What are divergences?
Divergence is when the price of an asset is moving in the opposite direction of a technical indicator, such as an oscillator, or is moving contrary to other data. Divergence warns that the current price trend may be weakening, and in some cases may lead to the price changing direction.
There are 4 main types of divergence, which are split into 2 categories;
regular divergences and hidden divergences. Regular divergences indicate possible trend reversals, and hidden divergences indicate possible trend continuation.
Regular bullish divergence: An indication of a potential trend reversal, from the current downtrend, to an uptrend.
Regular bearish divergence: An indication of a potential trend reversal, from the current uptrend, to a downtrend.
Hidden bullish divergence: An indication of a potential uptrend continuation.
Hidden bearish divergence: An indication of a potential downtrend continuation.
Setting alerts.
With this indicator you can set alerts to notify you when any/all of the above types of divergences occur, on any chart timeframe you choose.
Configurable pivot periods.
You can adjust the default pivot periods to suit your prefered trading style and timeframe. If you like to trade a shorter time frame, lowering the default lookback values will make the divergences drawn more sensitive to short term price action.
How do traders use divergences in their trading?
A divergence is considered a leading indicator in technical analysis , meaning it has the ability to indicate a potential price move in the short term future.
Hidden bullish and hidden bearish divergences, which indicate a potential continuation of the current trend are sometimes considered a good place for traders to begin, since trend continuation occurs more frequently than reversals, or trend changes.
When trading regular bullish divergences and regular bearish divergences, which are indications of a trend reversal, the probability of it doing so may increase when these occur at a strong support or resistance level . A common mistake new traders make is to get into a regular divergence trade too early, assuming it will immediately reverse, but these can continue to form for some time before the trend eventually changes, by using forms of support or resistance as an added confluence, such as when price reaches a moving average, the success rate when trading these patterns may increase.
Typically, traders will manually draw lines across the swing highs and swing lows of both the price chart and the oscillator to see whether they appear to present a divergence, this indicator will draw them for you, quickly and clearly, and can notify you when they occur.
Disclaimer : This script includes code from several stock indicators by Tradingview as well as the Divergence for Many Indicators v4 by LonesomeTheBlue. With special thanks.
Congestion Index by KatsanosCONGESTION INDEX
Market movements can be characterized by two distinct types or phases. In the first, the market shows trending movements which have a directional bias over a period of time. The second type of market behavior is periodic or cyclic motion, where the market shows no consistent directional bias and trades between two levels. This type of market results in the failure of trend-following indicators and the success of overbought/oversold oscillators. Both phases of the market require the use of different types of indicator. Trending markets need trend-following indicators such as moving averages, moving average convergence/divergence (MACD), and so on. Trading range markets need oscillators such as the relative strength index (RSI) and stochastics, which use overbought and oversold levels. The age-old problem for many trading systems is their inability to determine if a trending or trading range market is at hand. Trend-following indicators, such as the MACD or moving averages, tend to be whipsawed as markets enter a nontrending congestion phase. On the other hand, oscillators (which work well during trading range markets) are often too early to buy or sell in a trending market. Thus, identifying the market phase and selecting the appropriate indicators is critical to a system’s success. The congestion index attempts to identify the market’s character by dividing the actual percentage that the market has changed in the past x days by the extreme range according to the following formula:
Readings between+20 and−20indicate congestion or oscillating mode. Crossing over the 20 line from below indicates the start of a rising trend. Conversely, the start of a down turn is indicated by crossing under−20 from above. The CI can also be used as an overbought/oversold oscillator.
It was taken from İntermarket Trading Strategies book of by Markos Katsanos.Read the book.
D1:=Input(“DAYS IN CONGESTION”,1,500,15);
CI:=ROC(C,D1-1,%)/((HHV(H,D1)-LLV(L,D1))/(LLV(L,D1)+.01)+.000001);
Mov ( CI ,3,E)
(Copyright Markos Katsanos 2008)
Hybrid Overbought/Oversold OverlayIntroduction
This is a new representation of my well-known oscillator Hybrid Overbought/Oversold Detector overlaid on the chart. The script utilizes the following 12 different oscillators to bring forth a new indicator which I call it Hybrid OB/OS .
Utilized Oscillators
The utilized oscillators here are:
Bollinger Bands %B
Chaikin Money Flow (CMF)
Chande Momentum Oscillator (CMO)
Commodity Channel Index (CCI)
Disparity Index (DIX)
Keltner Channel %K
Money Flow Index (MFI)
Rate Of Change (ROC)
Relative Strength Index (RSI)
Relative Vigor Index (RVI/RVGI)
Stochastic
Twiggs Money Flow (TMF)
The challenging part of utilizing mentioned oscillators was that some of their formulas range are not similar and some of them does not have a mathematical range at all. So I used a normalization function to normalize all their output values to (0, 100) interval.
Overbought/Oversold Levels Calculation
I noticed that the levels which considered as OB/OS level by various traders for each of the utilized oscillators are so different, e.g., many traders consider 30 as OS level and 70 as OB level for RSI and some others take 20 and 80 as the levels, or some traders consider 20 and 80 as OS/OB levels for Stochastic oscillator. Also these levels could be different on different assets, e.g., OB/OS levels for CCI on EURUSD chart might be 80 and 20 while the levels on BTCUSDT chart might be 75 and 25, and so on.
So I decided to make a routine to automate the calculation of these levels using historical data. By this feature, my indicator would calculate the corresponding levels for the oscillators on current chart and then decide about the overbought/oversold situation of each one, which leads to a more accurate Hybrid OB/OS indication.
As the result, if all 12 individual oscillators say it's overbought/oversold, the Hybrid OB/OS shows 100% overbought/oversold, vice versa, if none of them say it's overbought/oversold, the Hybrid OB/OS shows 0, and so on.
The Overlaying Oscillator Problem!
A programming-related challenge here was that Pine Script assigns two separate spaces to the oscillators and the overlaid indicators, and the programmers are limited to use just one of them in each of their codes.
Knowing this, I was forced to simulate the oscillator space on the chart and display my oscillator as a diagram somehow. Of course it won't be as nice as the oscillator itself, because the relation between the main chart bars and the oscillator bars could not be obtained, but it's better than nothing!
Settings and Usage
The indicator settings contain some options about the calculations, the diagram display and the signals appearance. By default they are fine, but you could change them as you prefer.
This indicator is better to be used alongside other indicators as a confirmation (specially in counter-trend strategies I believe). Also it generates an external signal which you could use it in your own designed indicators as well.
Feel free to test it and also the former form of the Hybrid OB/OS . Good Luck!
Zigzag Trend/Divergence DetectorPullbacks are always hardest part of the trade and when it happen, we struggle to make decision on whether to continue the trade and wait for recovery or cut losses. Similarly, when an instrument is trending well, it is often difficult decision to make if we want to take some profit off the table. This indicator is aimed to make these decisions easier by providing a combined opinion of sentiment based on trend and possible divergence.
⬜ Process
▶ Use any indicator to find trend bias. Here we are using simple supertrend
▶ Use any oscillator. I have added few inbuilt oscillators as option. Default used is RSI.
▶ Find divergence by using zigzag to detect pivot high/low of price and observing indicator movement difference between subsequent pivots in the same direction.
▶ Combine divregence type, divergence bias and trend bias to derive overall sentiment.
Complete details of all the possible combinations are present here along with table legend
⬜Chart Legend
C - Continuation
D - Divergence
H - Hidden Divergence
I - Indeterminate
⬜ Settings
▶ Zigzag parameters : These let you chose zigzag properties. If you check "Use confirmed pivots", then unconfirmed pivot will be ignored in the table and in the chart
▶ Oscillator parameters : Lets you select different oscillators and settings. Available oscillators involve
CCI - Commodity Channel Index
CMO - Chande Momentum Oscillator
COG - Center Of Gravity
DMI - Directional Movement Index (Only ADX is used here)
MACD - Moving average convergence divergence (Can chose either histogram or MACD line)
MFI - Money Flow Index
MOM - Momentum oscillator
ROC - Rate Of Change
RSI - Relative Strength Index
TSI - Total Strength Index
WPR - William Percent R
BB - Bollinger Percent B
KC - Keltner Channel Percent K
DC - Donchian Channel Percent D
ADC - Adoptive Donchian Channel Percent D ( Adoptive-Donchian-Channel )
▶ Trend bias : Supertrend is used for trend bias. Coloring option color candles in the direction of supertrend. More option for trend bias can be added in future.
▶ Stats : Enables you to display history in tabular format.
Overview of settings present here:
⬜ Notes
Trend detection is done only with respect to previous pivot in the same direction. Hence, if chart has too many zigzags in short period, try increasing the zigzag length or chart timeframe. Similarly, if there is a steep trend, use lower timeframe charts to dig further.
Oscillators does not always make pivots at same bar as price. Due to this some the divergence calculation may not be correct. Hence visual inspection is always recommended.
⬜ Possible future enhancements
More options for trend bias
Enhance divergence calculation. Possible options include using oscillator based zigzag as primary or using close prices based zigzag instead of high/low.
Multi level zigzag option - Can be messy to include more than one zigzag. Option can be added to chose either Level1 or Level2 zigzags.
Alerts - Alerts can only be added for confirmed pivots - otherwise it will generate too many unwanted alerts. Will think about it :)
If I get time, I will try to make a video.
[blackcat] L1 Mel Widner Auto Support and ResistanceLevel: 1
Background
This indicator/formula was presented in the May 1998 issue of the ‘Technical Analysis of Stocks and Commodities’ magazine. The article was titled “Automatic support and resistance” the article described an approach to finding support and resistance levels on a chart.
Function
Support and resistance analysis is a proven method for selecting key price levels for trading decisions; traders usually perform the analysis by hand. The automatic charting method and new oscillators presented here are easy to implement and give a precise comparison of price to these important levels. Suppose prices are moving higher, fed by steady cash flow and favorable expectations. Then, at some point, the advance begins to slow. Upward momentum is still dominant, but at that point it is diminishing and the rate of rise is decreasing, evidence of resistance. It is like throwing a ball into the air; the ball starts with initial momentum, then slows under the influence of gravity before eventually falling.
Prices behave in a similar manner. After opposing resistance forces are applied for a time, prices slow, finally stop, and reverse direction. The turning point is a resistance level and is the highest high price for that particular period. The converse is true for declining prices. A slowing decline results from support forces and a support level is established at the point where prices turn upward.
Simply, forces cause acceleration. Market forces do not directly produce momentum, but rather momentum changes. These momentum changes in turn are integrated or accumulated to establish momentum. The presence of market forces is evident when the slope of prices, or momentum, changes over time. The effect is most dramatic when forces also change, triggered by price moves or changes in expectations, and abrupt reversals occur. Examination of price histories can confirm the presence of these features.
Two oscillators are defined: the WSO (Widner support oscillator) and the WRO (Widner resistance oscillator). The WSO compares the current close with the most recent six support levels. Values range from zero to 100. WSO = zero means that the close is below all of the six support levels, and
WSO = 100 means that the current close is above all of the six support levels. Changes in WSO indicate changes in support, either breaking of an old level or establishing a new one. The WSO abd WRO are defined as:
WSO = 100( 1 – (INT(S1/C) + INT(S2/C) + INT(S3/C) + INT(S4/C) + INT(S5/C) + INT(S6/C)) / 6)
WRO = 100( 1 – (INT(R1/C) + INT(R2/C) + INT(R3/C) + INT(R4/C) + INT(R5/C) + INT(R6/C)) / 6)
Consequently, WSO and WRO can cross, but this is very uncommon.
Enter long when support is strong and resistance is weak or enter when support is building.
Key Signal
wso --> Widner support oscillator.
wro --> Widner resistance oscillator.
Remarks
This is a Level 1 free and open source indicator.
Feedbacks are appreciated.
Oscillator Profile IndicatorDescription:
The Oscillator Profile Indicator (OPI) is designed to provide insights into market trends and potential reversal points by profiling the value distribution of an oscillator or the price chart over a specified lookback period.
The OPI works by calculating the Point of Control (PoC) for the oscillator values or prices in the given lookback period. This PoC, essentially a median, is considered the fair value where most trading activities have happened. Along with this, OPI also calculates lower and upper boundaries by taking the specified percentile of the sorted distribution of values. These boundaries outline the value area within which a significant portion of trading activity has occurred.
The main feature of the OPI is the interpretation of PoC movement and how it relates to general market trends. If the PoC moves above 0 on the oscillator, it's a potential indication that we are in a general uptrend. Conversely, if the PoC moves below 0, this can be a signal for a general downtrend.
Usage:
While OPI can be used on both price charts and oscillators, its effectiveness is more pronounced when used on oscillators. Applying this indicator to oscillators such as the Relative Strength Index (RSI) or the Moving Average Convergence Divergence (MACD) can provide useful insights.
How to Read:
PoC line: The line represents the median of the past 'n' periods. Its movement above or below 0 can be used to identify general uptrends or downtrends respectively.
Upper and Lower Boundary lines: These lines represent the specified percentile of the value distribution in the lookback period.
Colored Fills: The fills between the upper and lower boundary lines visually represent the value area. The color changes based on the relative position of the source value (price or oscillator value) to the PoC.
Signals:
An uptrend is indicated when the PoC moves above 0 on the oscillator, especially when coupled with an upward crossover of the source value through the PoC.
A downtrend is signaled when the PoC drops below 0 on the oscillator, particularly when paired with a downward crossover of the source value through the PoC.
(!) Note: Like all indicators, OPI should be used in conjunction with other technical analysis tools for the best results. It is also advisable to backtest this indicator with your strategy before using it in live trading.
Center Of Linearity - A More Efficient Alternative To Elhers CGIntroduction
The center of gravity oscillator (CG) is one of the oscillators presented in Elhers book "cybernetic analysis for stocks and futures". This oscillator can be described as a bandpass filter centered around 0, its simplicity is ridiculous yet this indicator managed to get a pretty great popularity, this might be due to Elhers saying that he has substantial advantages over conventional oscillators used in technical analysis.
Today i propose a more efficient estimation of the center of gravity oscillator, this estimation will only use one convolution, while the original and other estimations use 2. I will also explain everything about the center of gravity oscillator, because even if its name can be imposing its actually super easy to understand.
The Center Of Gravity Oscillator
The CG oscillator is a bandpass filter, in short it filter high frequencies components as well as low frequency ones, this is why the oscillator is both smooth (no high frequencies) as well as detrended (no low frequencies), and therefore the oscillator focus exclusively on the cycles.
Its calculation is simple, its just a linearly weighted moving average minus a simple moving average wma - sma , this is not what is showcased in its book, but the result is just the same, the only thing that change is the scale, this is why some estimates have a weird scale that is not centered around 0, the output is technically the same but the scale isn't, however the scale of an oscillator isn't a big deal as long as the oscillator is centered around 0 and we don't plan to use it as input for overlay indicators.
If you are familiar with moving averages you'll know that the wma is more reactive than the sma, this is because more recent values have higher weights, and since subtracting a low-pass filter with another one conserve the smoothness while removing low-frequency components, we end up with a bandpass filter, yay!
Why "Center" Of Gravity ?
Elhers explain the idea behind this title with a pretty blurry analogy, so i'll try to give a visual explanation, we said earlier that the center of gravity was simply : wma - sma, ok lets look at their respective impulse responses,
Those are basically the weights of each filters, also called filter coefficients, lets denote the coefficients of the wma as a and the coefficients of the moving average as b . So whats the meaning behind center of gravity ? We basically want to "center" the weights of the wma, this can be done with a - b
The coefficients of the wma are therefore centered around 0, but actually there is more to that than a simple title explanation, basically a - b = c , where c are the coefficients of the center of gravity bandpass filter, therefore if we where to apply convolution to the price with c , we would get the center of gravity oscillator. Thats the thing with FIR filters, we can use convolution for describing a lot of FIR systems, and the difference between two impulse responses of two low-pass filters (here wma, sma) give us the coefficients of a bandpass filter.
The Center Of Linearity
At this point we could simply get the oscillator by using length/2 - i as coefficient, however in order to propose a more interesting variation i decided to go with a less efficient but more original approach, the center of linearity. Imagine two convolutions :
a = i*src and b = i*src
a only has a reversed index length-i , and is therefore describe a simple wma. Both convolutions give the following impulse responses :
Both are symmetrical to each others, and cross at a point, denoted center of linearity. The difference of each responses is :
Using it as coefficients would give us a bandpass filter who would look exactly like the Cg oscillator, this would be calculated as follows in our convolution :
i*src -i*src ) = i*(src -src )
Lets compare our estimate with the CG oscillator,
Conclusion
I this post i explained the calculation of the CG oscillator and proposed an efficient estimation of it by using an original approach. The CG oscillator isn't something complicated to use nor calculate, and is in fact closely related to the rolling covariance between the price and a linear function, so if you want to use the crosses between the center of gravity and 0 you can just use : correlation(close,bar_index,length) instead, thats basically the same.
The proposed indicator can also use other weightings instead of a linear one, each impulses responses would remain symmetrical.
MTF Technical Ratings [Anan]█ OVERVIEW
This indicator is a modified version of "Technical Ratings" v5.0 available in the public library to provide a quick overview of Technical Ratings in 6 optional timeframes.
█ FEATURES
- Multi-timeframe Table.
- Display Technical Ratings for "MAs" with a percentage.
- Display Technical Ratings for "Oscillators" with a percentage.
- Display Technical Ratings for "All" with a percentage.
- Full control of displaying any row(MAs / Oscillators / All) or any column(Multi-timeframe)
- Full control of Table position and size.
- Full control of displaying any row or column.
ORIGINAL DESCRIPTION ABOUT TECHNICAL RATING v1.0
█ OVERVIEW
This indicator calculates TradingView's well-known "Strong Buy", "Buy", "Neutral", "Sell" or "Strong Sell" states using the aggregate biases of 26 different technical indicators.
█ CALCULATIONS
The indicator calculates the aggregate value of two groups of indicators: moving averages and oscillators.
The "MAs" group is comprised of 15 different components:
• Six Simple Moving Averages of periods 10, 20, 30, 50, 100 and 200
• Six Exponential Moving Averages of the same periods
• A Hull Moving Average of period 9
• A Volume-weighed Moving Average of period 20
• Ichimoku
The "Oscillators" group includes 11 components:
• RSI
• Stochastic
• CCI
• ADX
• Awesome Oscillator
• Momentum
• MACD
• Stochastic RSI
• Wiliams %R
• Bull Bear Power
• Ultimate Oscillator
The state of each group's components is evaluated to a +1/0/-1 value corresponding to its bull/neutral/bear bias. The resulting value for each of the two groups are then averaged to produce the overall value for the indicator, which oscillates between +1 and -1. The complete conditions used in the calculations are documented in the Help Center.
Market Forecast w/ Signals [QuantVue]The Market Forecast With Signals Indicator is an upgraded version of the popular ThinkorSwim platforms Market Forecast. This upgraded version utilizes stochastic oscillators, moving averages, and momentum calculations to find potential buying and selling opportunities.
Stochastic Oscillator
The indicator calculates three variations of the Fast Stochastic Oscillator for different time periods:
🔹Intermediate: Calculated over a medium-term period (default 31 bars).
🔹Momentum: Calculated over a short-term period (default 5 bars).
🔹Near Term: Calculated over a very short-term period (default 3 bars).
These calculations involve finding the highest and lowest values within their respective periods and comparing the current close to this range.
Moving Average Smoothing
The results of the Fast Stochastic Oscillator for the Intermediate and Near Term are then smoothed using a Simple Moving Average (SMA):
🔹Intermediate: 5-period SMA of the Intermediate Stochastic Oscillator.
🔹Near Term: 2-period SMA of the Near Term Stochastic Oscillator.
Momentum Indicator
A custom momentum calculation is performed, using the recent high and low prices over four periods.
Display
The indicator plots the smoothed Intermediate, Near Term, and custom Momentum calculations as separate lines on the chart.
Trading Signals
While the original indicator plots the lines mentioned above, the Market Forecast w/ Signals goes a step further by identifying key moments when nuanced signals fire. The built in alerts and visual aids make spotting these trading opportunities a breeze.
Clusters - Bullish and Bearish clusters are identified based on the convergence of all three lines (Intermediate, Near, and Momentum) above 80 (Bearish) or below 20 (Bullish).
The background color of the chart changes to indicate these clusters, aiding in quick identification of market extremes.
Trend Reversals - Marked with labels on the chart, this is based on the direction of the cluster (bullish or bearish) and the subsequent price movement crossing a threshold determined during the cluster formation.
Divergences - Divergences between the Near Term line and price highs/lows are detected using pivot points. These divergences are then plotted as lines on the chart, highlighting potential discrepancies between price action and momentum, which can signal reversals.
Indicator Features:
🔹Custom Colors
🔹Show/Hide Signals
🔹Alerts
Give this indicator a BOOST and COMMENT your thoughts!
We hope you enjoy.
Cheers!
Ichimoku Kinkō hyō 目均衡表█ OVERVIEW
Ichimoku is known to be an Indicator that completes itself, for its power but also for its complexity. This is why I decided to improve the work of
Goichi Hosoda in order to offer the maximum number of options for the most seasoned users but also beginners with options to simplify the
reading of Ichimoku (such as a panel directly giving you the status of each Ichimoku options or Supports/Resistances drawn automatically
according to the conditions chosen in the settings.
█ OPTIONS
Here is the complete list of options to implement :
- "Source" and "Alternative Source" (with lots of choices)
- Heikin Ashi volume.
- Weighted Moving Average Smoothing
- Minimum, Maximum and Adaptive Percentage Length adjustable for Tenkan-Sen, Kijun-Sen, Chikou Span and Senkou-Span)
- The Chikou has a Filter with modifiable Length (in Lookback Percentage)
- Advanced Filter Settings: Volume, Tenkan-Sen/Kijun-Sen Cross, Volatility, Tenkan-Sen Equal Kijun-Sen, Chikou Greater Than Price,
Chikou Momentum, Price Greater Than Kumo, Price Greater Than Tenkan-Sen, Chikou Trend Filter .
- Oscillator volume adjustable via drop-down menu with 5 types of oscillators available: "TFS Volume", "On Balance Volume",
"Klinger Volume", "Cumulative Volume", "Volume Zone".
- Relative Volume Strength Index with Length, Peak and EMA's adjustable. 3 Oscillators available: “On Balance Volume”,
“Cumulative Volume”, “Price Volume Trend”.
- Volatility adjustable with Fast and Slow Length.
- Totally customizable Support and Resistance.
- Bar Trend Color based on chosen settings.
- Fully customizable help panel.
- Alerts available for: Labels Detection, Support/Resistance Line Cross, Panel Trend Status Direction.
█ NOTES
Remember to only make a decision once you are sure of your analysis. Good trading sessions to everyone and don't forget,
risk management remains the most important!
Stochastic SuperTrend [BigBeluga]🔵 OVERVIEW
A hybrid momentum-trend tool that combines Stochastic RSI with SuperTrend logic to deliver clean directional signals based on momentum turns.
Stochastic SuperTrend is a straightforward yet powerful oscillator overlay designed to highlight turning points in momentum with high clarity. It overlays a SuperTrend-style envelope onto the Stochastic RSI, generating intuitive up/down signals when a momentum shift occurs across the neutral 50 level. Built for traders who appreciate simplicity without sacrificing reliability.
🔵 CONCEPTS
Stochastic RSI: Measures momentum by applying stochastic calculations to the RSI curve instead of raw price.
SuperTrend Bands: Dynamic upper/lower bands are drawn around the smoothed Stoch RSI line using a user-defined multiplier.
Momentum Direction: Trend flips when the smoothed Stoch RSI crosses above/below the calculated bands.
Neutral Bias Filter: Directional arrows only appear when momentum turns above or below the central 50 level—adding confluence.
🔵 FEATURES
Trend Detection on Oscillator: Applies SuperTrend logic directly to the Stoch RSI curve.
Clean Entry Signals:
→ 🢁 arrow printed when trend flips bullish below 50 (bottom reversals).
→ 🢃 arrow printed when trend flips bearish above 50 (top reversals).
Custom Multiplier: Adjust sensitivity of SuperTrend band spacing around the oscillator.
Neutral Zone Highlight: Visual zone between 0–50 (green) and 50–100 (red) for quick momentum polarity reference.
Toggle SuperTrend Line: Option to show/hide the SuperTrend trail on the Stoch RSI.
🔵 HOW TO USE
Use 🢁 signals for potential bottom reversals when momentum flips bullish from oversold regions.
Use 🢃 signals for potential top reversals when momentum flips bearish from overbought areas.
Combine with price-based SuperTrend or support/resistance zones for confluence.
Suitable for scalping, swing trading, or momentum filtering across all timeframes.
🔵 CONCLUSION
Stochastic SuperTrend is a simple yet refined tool that captures clean momentum shifts with directional clarity. Whether you're identifying reversals, filtering entries, or spotting exhaustion in a trend, this oscillator overlay delivers just what you need— no clutter, just clean momentum structure.
(JS) BallistaAlright so this is a script I made by combining two existing ones and making a really cool discovery that has proven very useful.
You'll notice that there are two separate oscillators that are laid on top of each other. The background oscillator is my "Tip-and-Dip" oscillator which you can see here (will refer to this as TnD from here), and the foreground oscillator from the Squeeze , which can be viewed here .
Initially I just wanted to see how they interacted with one another and compare them, but this led to some pretty interesting observations.
First let me go through the options real quick to get that out of the way, though it is mostly self-explanatory.
Lookback Period defines the amount of bars used for the TnD oscillator.
Smoothing Value smooths out the TnD output.
Standard Deviations is used to calculate the TnD formula.
Color Scheme is preset BG colors.
Using Dark Mode changes colors based on dark mode or not.
Squeeze Momentum On turns the Squeeze in the foreground off and on.
Arrows Off turns the arrows on the indicator off and on.
Now to explain the indicator a bit more. I have the default lookback period as 40 due to the Squeeze being 20, which makes the TnD oscillator the "slow" output with the Squeeze being the "fast" output.
Some initial observations were that when both the Squeeze and the TnD are moving in the direction, when the Squeeze is higher (uptrend) or lower (downtrend) it seems to indicate strength in the move. As the move loses steam you'll notice the Squeeze diverge from the TnD.
However, the most useful thing I discovered about the interaction between these two indicators is where the name for it came from. So if you aren't familiar with what a Ballista is, per Wikipedia, "The ballista... sometimes called bolt thrower, was an ancient missile weapon that launched either bolts or stones at a distant target." There are instances where the Squeeze seems to get ahead of itself and gets too far away from the TnD (which is the long term trend between the two). The key thing to look for is an "inverted squeeze" - this is when the squeeze oscillator ends up flipping against the TnD. When this occurs there is an extremely high probability that you'll see price shoot back the opposite way of the Squeeze.
I've been using this setup myself for about a year now and have been very satisfied with the results thusfar. I circled some examples on the SPX daily chart here to show you what I mean with the inverted Squeeze shooting back.
Market Participation Index [PhenLabs]📊 Market Participation Index
Version: PineScript™ v6
📌 Description
Market Participation Index is a well-evolved statistical oscillator that constantly learns to develop by adapting to changing market behavior through the intricate mathematical modeling process. MPI combines different statistical approaches and Bayes’ probability theory of analysis to provide extensive insight into market participation and building momentum. MPI combines diverse statistical thinking principles of physics and information and marries them for subtle changes to occur in markets, levels to become influential as important price targets, and pattern divergences to unveil before it is visible by analytical methods in an old-fashioned methodology.
🚀 Points of Innovation:
Automatic market condition detection system with intelligent preset selection
Multi-statistical approach combining classical and advanced metrics
Fractal-based divergence system with quality scoring
Adaptive threshold calculation using statistical properties of current market
🚨 Important🚨
The ‘Auto’ mode intelligently selects the optimal preset based on real-time market conditions, if the visualization does not appear to the best of your liking then select the option in parenthesis next to the auto mode on the label in the oscillator in the settings panel.
🔧 Core Components
Statistical Foundation: Multiple statistical measures combined with weighted approach
Market Condition Analysis: Real-time detection of market states (trending, ranging, volatile)
Change Point Detection: Bayesian analysis for finding significant market structure shifts
Divergence System: Fractal-based pattern detection with quality assessment
Adaptive Visualization: Dynamic color schemes with context-appropriate settings
🔥 Key Features
The indicator provides comprehensive market analysis through:
Multi-statistical Oscillator: Combines Z-score, MAD, and fractal dimensions
Advanced Statistical Components: Includes skewness, kurtosis, and entropy analysis
Auto-preset System: Automatically selects optimal settings for current conditions
Fractal Divergence Analysis: Detects and grades quality of divergence patterns
Adaptive Thresholds: Dynamically adjusts overbought/oversold levels
🎨 Visualization
Color-coded Oscillator: Gradient-filled oscillator line showing intensity
Divergence Markings: Clear visualization of bullish and bearish divergences
Threshold Lines: Dynamic or fixed overbought/oversold levels
Preset Information: On-chart display of current market conditions
Multiple Color Schemes: Modern, Classic, Monochrome, and Neon themes
Classic
Modern
Monochrome
Neon
📖 Usage Guidelines
The indicator offers several customization options:
Market Condition Settings:
Preset Mode: Choose between Auto-detection or specific market condition presets
Color Theme: Select visual theme matching your chart style
Divergence Labels: Choose whether or not you’d like to see the divergence
✅ Best Use Cases:
Identify potential market reversals through statistical divergences
Detect changes in market structure before price confirmation
Filter trades based on current market condition (trending vs. ranging)
Find optimal entry and exit points using adaptive thresholds
Monitor shifts in market participation and momentum
⚠️ Limitations
Requires sufficient historical data for accurate statistical analysis
Auto-detection may lag during rapid market condition changes
Advanced statistical calculations have higher computational requirements
Manual preset selection may be required in certain transitional markets
💡 What Makes This Unique
Statistical Depth: Goes beyond traditional indicators with advanced statistical measures
Adaptive Intelligence: Automatically adjusts to current market conditions
Bayesian Analysis: Identifies statistically significant change points in market structure
Multi-factor Approach: Combines multiple statistical dimensions for confirmation
Fractal Divergence System: More robust than traditional divergence detection methods
🔬 How It Works
The indicator processes market data through four main components:
Market Condition Analysis:
Evaluates trend strength, volatility, and price patterns
Automatically selects optimal preset parameters
Adapts sensitivity based on current conditions
Statistical Oscillator:
Combines multiple statistical measures with weights
Normalizes values to consistent scale
Applies adaptive smoothing
Advanced Statistical Analysis:
Calculates higher-order statistical moments
Applies information-theoretic measures
Detects distribution anomalies
Divergence Detection:
Uses fractal theory to identify pivot points
Detects and scores divergence quality
Filters signals based on current market phase
💡 Note:
The Market Participation Index performs optimally when used across multiple timeframes for confirmation. Its statistical foundation makes it particularly valuable during market transitions and periods of changing volatility, where traditional indicators often fail to provide clear signals.