OPEN-SOURCE SCRIPT
Light Balance

The script is simple, going for a color scheme logic which tenderly avoids rigorous signals processing.
For the script to remain simple, logical derivatives are also out; as such, there are no secondary relations built off of primary ones. And it also ignores (unless you do this yourself) the logic in a varying order of lines.
Coloring has been done according to a limited set of relations between the four (4) plotted lines.
Quite a bit of information is capture, as you'll see when looking at line order, crossings, and transparency transitions and their patterns.
The approach makes the relations ones which can be learned over time; you become the algorithm to sort out signals. Ha ha. I know that sounds like a cop out doesn't it. Did I mention it's a simple script?
One thing you might want to play with right away are fills having red and green, and lime and fuchsia. It would be cool to reduce it all down to two (2) colors, but all the boolean relations might have to be listed, and it also may not be possible to cumulatively combine transparency overlays of the same value. Visually, that approach may not result to awaken a useful feature anyway. Also, fill() has its limitations in that it cannot be in a local scope; this includes function wrapped calls to fill(), or calls made using branching logic statements if/elseif, iff(), and var = (cond) ? t_val/exp : f_val/exp. So, to my knowledge, a fill() can not be made to be logically on/off.
Please, enjoy getting some use out of it.
For the script to remain simple, logical derivatives are also out; as such, there are no secondary relations built off of primary ones. And it also ignores (unless you do this yourself) the logic in a varying order of lines.
Coloring has been done according to a limited set of relations between the four (4) plotted lines.
Quite a bit of information is capture, as you'll see when looking at line order, crossings, and transparency transitions and their patterns.
The approach makes the relations ones which can be learned over time; you become the algorithm to sort out signals. Ha ha. I know that sounds like a cop out doesn't it. Did I mention it's a simple script?
One thing you might want to play with right away are fills having red and green, and lime and fuchsia. It would be cool to reduce it all down to two (2) colors, but all the boolean relations might have to be listed, and it also may not be possible to cumulatively combine transparency overlays of the same value. Visually, that approach may not result to awaken a useful feature anyway. Also, fill() has its limitations in that it cannot be in a local scope; this includes function wrapped calls to fill(), or calls made using branching logic statements if/elseif, iff(), and var = (cond) ? t_val/exp : f_val/exp. So, to my knowledge, a fill() can not be made to be logically on/off.
Please, enjoy getting some use out of it.
オープンソーススクリプト
TradingViewの精神に則り、この作者はスクリプトのソースコードを公開しているので、その内容を理解し検証することができます。作者に感謝です!無料でお使いいただけますが、このコードを投稿に再利用する際にはハウスルールに従うものとします。
免責事項
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オープンソーススクリプト
TradingViewの精神に則り、この作者はスクリプトのソースコードを公開しているので、その内容を理解し検証することができます。作者に感謝です!無料でお使いいただけますが、このコードを投稿に再利用する際にはハウスルールに従うものとします。
免責事項
これらの情報および投稿は、TradingViewが提供または保証する金融、投資、取引、またはその他の種類のアドバイスや推奨を意図したものではなく、またそのようなものでもありません。詳しくは利用規約をご覧ください。