OPEN-SOURCE SCRIPT
OI: Simple Band

OI: Simple Band (Open Source)
OI: Simple Band is a very simple, open-source overlay that draws a two-line moving-average band and fills the space between them to highlight trend bias and momentum shifts at a glance.
What it plots
EMA (Exponential Moving Average) using the selected length
SMMA (Smoothed Moving Average) using the same length
A ribbon fill between the two:
Green when EMA > SMMA (bullish bias)
Red when EMA < SMMA (bearish bias)
Why use two different MAs with the same length?
Even with the same length, these two averages react differently:
EMA weights recent prices more heavily, so it responds faster to changes.
SMMA is designed to be steadier and slower, filtering more noise.
Using the same length keeps the comparison fair (same smoothing window) while still giving you a “fast vs slow response” relationship. The distance and relationship between them becomes a simple way to see:
Momentum / pressure: When EMA pulls away from SMMA, price is moving with enough force to overcome smoothing.
Compression: When they converge, momentum is fading and conditions often look more “balanced.”
State changes: Crossovers flip the ribbon colour and can be used as a context shift (trend/bias filter), not a standalone entry/exit rule.
Inputs
Moving average band (length): Controls both EMA and SMMA smoothing.
SMMA Source: Chooses the data used for the SMMA calculation (EMA is calculated on close).
Notes
This is intentionally minimal: no higher-timeframe requests, no security() calls, no signals — just a clean visual band.
Like all moving averages, it updates on the live candle and will settle on bar close.
OI: Simple Band is a very simple, open-source overlay that draws a two-line moving-average band and fills the space between them to highlight trend bias and momentum shifts at a glance.
What it plots
EMA (Exponential Moving Average) using the selected length
SMMA (Smoothed Moving Average) using the same length
A ribbon fill between the two:
Green when EMA > SMMA (bullish bias)
Red when EMA < SMMA (bearish bias)
Why use two different MAs with the same length?
Even with the same length, these two averages react differently:
EMA weights recent prices more heavily, so it responds faster to changes.
SMMA is designed to be steadier and slower, filtering more noise.
Using the same length keeps the comparison fair (same smoothing window) while still giving you a “fast vs slow response” relationship. The distance and relationship between them becomes a simple way to see:
Momentum / pressure: When EMA pulls away from SMMA, price is moving with enough force to overcome smoothing.
Compression: When they converge, momentum is fading and conditions often look more “balanced.”
State changes: Crossovers flip the ribbon colour and can be used as a context shift (trend/bias filter), not a standalone entry/exit rule.
Inputs
Moving average band (length): Controls both EMA and SMMA smoothing.
SMMA Source: Chooses the data used for the SMMA calculation (EMA is calculated on close).
Notes
This is intentionally minimal: no higher-timeframe requests, no security() calls, no signals — just a clean visual band.
Like all moving averages, it updates on the live candle and will settle on bar close.
オープンソーススクリプト
TradingViewの精神に則り、このスクリプトの作者はコードをオープンソースとして公開してくれました。トレーダーが内容を確認・検証できるようにという配慮です。作者に拍手を送りましょう!無料で利用できますが、コードの再公開はハウスルールに従う必要があります。
免責事項
この情報および投稿は、TradingViewが提供または推奨する金融、投資、トレード、その他のアドバイスや推奨を意図するものではなく、それらを構成するものでもありません。詳細は利用規約をご覧ください。
オープンソーススクリプト
TradingViewの精神に則り、このスクリプトの作者はコードをオープンソースとして公開してくれました。トレーダーが内容を確認・検証できるようにという配慮です。作者に拍手を送りましょう!無料で利用できますが、コードの再公開はハウスルールに従う必要があります。
免責事項
この情報および投稿は、TradingViewが提供または推奨する金融、投資、トレード、その他のアドバイスや推奨を意図するものではなく、それらを構成するものでもありません。詳細は利用規約をご覧ください。