Argentum Flag [AGP] Ver.2.5Central Purpose and Concept
The Argentum Flag script is a multifunctional tool that integrates and visualizes multiple key indicators to provide a detailed and unified perspective of the market. The core concept is to analyze price from different angles—volatility, volume, and momentum—to identify confluences and patterns that may be difficult to see with separate indicators. This "mashup" is not a simple fusion of indicators, but a strategic combination of tools that complement each other to offer a comprehensive view of asset behavior.
Components and Their Functionality
This script combines and visualizes the following elements:
EMA Percentage Bands (EMA Bands):
Uses an Exponential Moving Average (EMA) as a baseline.
Calculates and draws several volatility bands that deviate from the central EMA by fixed percentages (0.47%, 0.94%, 2.36%). These bands are inspired by Fibonacci ratios and the cyclical nature of the market.
The bands are colored with a dynamic gradient that reflects the current state of volatility.
Utility: These bands act as dynamic support and resistance areas. The price entering or exiting these zones can indicate a change in volatility or a possible exhaustion of the movement.
Volatility Signals (Vortex & Prime Signals):
The script generates visual signals when the price stays outside the volatility bands for a specific number of bars.
Vortex Signals (diamond ⍲): Appear when the price crosses and stays outside the Prime bands, suggesting a high volatility or a possible continuation of the trend.
Exit/Entry Signals (circle ⌾): Are activated when the price stays outside the Vortex bands, indicating an extreme extension of volatility. These can be interpreted as potential reversal or profit-taking zones.
Utility: They help traders quickly identify moments of high and low volatility and potential turning points in price action.
Volume Analysis (Volume Bar Colors):
The script changes the color of the bars based on the relationship between the current volume and the average volume over a 50-bar period.
Utility: This feature allows the trader to immediately visualize the strength behind a price movement. For example, a bullish candle with "extreme" volume suggests strong buying interest, while a bearish candle with "low" volume could indicate a weak correction.
Summary Tables (Dashboard):
EMA-Fibo Table: Displays the values of 12 EMAs based on the Fibonacci sequence (5, 8, 13, 21...) in an easy-to-access table. The background color of each value indicates if the current price is above (bullish) or below (bearish) that EMA.
Multi-Timeframe RSI Table: Displays the Relative Strength Index (RSI) values across multiple timeframes (from 1 minute to monthly). The text color changes to highlight if the RSI is in overbought (orange) or oversold (white) areas, according to the established levels.
Utility: These tables condense a large amount of data into a simple format, allowing traders to perform a quick, multi-timeframe market analysis without constantly switching charts.
How to Use the Script
This script is a contextual analysis tool that works best when its different components are combined. It is not a "buy and sell signal" system on its own, but a tool for informed decision-making.
Trend Identification: Use the EMA table to see the general trend direction across different timeframes. A price above most of the EMAs in the table suggests a bullish bias.
Volatility Reading: Observe the EMA bands. If the price stays within the bands, volatility is low. A strong move that breaks out of the bands, accompanied by an "extreme" volume color (blue), suggests strong momentum that could continue.
Momentum Analysis: Use the RSI table to confirm movements. An overbought 15m RSI could support a reversal signal from the Vortex bands, while a 1D RSI in a neutral zone may indicate that the main trend has not changed.
Signal Confirmation: Visual signals (diamond and circle) should not be used in isolation. They must be confirmed by volume analysis and dashboard readings. For example, an "Exit Signal" (circle) with low volume may be less reliable than one with high volume and a clear reversal candle.
Disclaimer
This script is for informational and educational purposes only. It is not financial advice, nor is it a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument. All trading involves risk, and past performance is not indicative of future results. The user is solely responsible for their own trading decisions.
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BK AK-Flag Formations🏴☠️ Introducing BK AK-Flag Formations — Raise the standard. Drive the line. Continue the assault. 🏴☠️
Built for traders who exploit momentum with discipline: flagpoles, flags, and pennants detected, tagged, and briefed—so you can press advantage instead of hesitating.
🎖️ Full Credit
The pattern engine, detection logic, and architecture are Trendoscope—one of the absolute best coders on TradingView and the original creator of this indicator’s core. I asked for interface upgrades and knew he was deep in other builds, so I forged the add-ons and released them for the community that values them.
My enhancements (on top of Trendoscope):
Label transparency (text + background)
Short-form labels (BF/BeF/BP/BeP/…)
Transparency controls for short-form labels
Hover tooltips with full pattern name + bullish/bearish bias (toggle)
Everything else is Trendoscope. Respect where it’s due.
🧠 What It Does
Locks onto flags and pennants after strong impulses (flagpoles).
Prints clean battlefield tags (BF, BeF, BP, BeP…) so the setup is obvious without burying price.
Mouse-over for the brief: full pattern name + directional bias exactly when you need it.
Multi-zigzag sweep for micro→macro detection, overlap control, bar-ratio verification, max-pattern caps, dark/light aware palette + custom colors.
🧭 Read the Continuation
BF — Bull Flag: strong pole, orderly pullback; look for break and measured move continuity.
BP — Bull Pennant: tight triangle after thrust; expansion confirms carry.
BeF — Bear Flag: weak rallies in a downtrend; break = continuation lower.
BeP — Bear Pennant: compressed pause beneath resistance; release favors trend.
Standards are not decoration—they are orders.
🤝 Acknowledgments
Original engine & libraries: Trendoscope (legend).
Enhancement layer (UX): transparency, short codes, tooltip system — BK.
Mentor: A.K. — clarity, patience, judgment. His discipline guides every choice here.
🫡 Give Forward
Don’t be cheap with your knowledge. If my indicators sharpen your edge:
Teach someone to read structure with discipline.
Share your process, not just screenshots.
Contribute code, context, or courage to those behind you.
Tools are force multipliers. Character decides how they’re used.
🙏 Final Word
“Plans are established by counsel; by wise guidance wage war.” — Proverbs 20:18
Impulse → formation → continuation.
Raise the banner, hold formation, and execute with wisdom.
BK AK-Flag Formations — when the standard rises, the line advances.
Gd bless. 🙏
BK AK-Warfare Formations👑 Introducing BK AK-Warfare Formations — Form the pride. Take the high ground. Strike with wisdom. 👑
This is my 9th release—built for traders who think like commanders: see the formation, decide the maneuver, deliver the strike.
🎖️ Full Credit
The pattern engine, detection logic, and architecture come from Trendoscope—one of the absolute best coders on TradingView and the original creator of this indicator’s core.
I asked for a few interface upgrades and knew he was driving bigger builds. So I forged the add-ons myself and am releasing them for those who value a cleaner, more tactical read.
My enhancements (on top of Trendoscope):
Label transparency (text + background)
Short-form pattern codes (AC/DC/RC/RWE/...)
Transparency controls for short-form labels
Hover tooltips with full pattern name + bullish/bearish/neutral bias (toggle)
Everything else is Trendoscope. Respect where it’s due.
🧠 What It Does
Auto-detects Channels, Wedges (expanding/contracting), and Triangles (ascending/descending/converging/diverging).
Prints clean battlefield tags (AC, DC, RWE, …) so structure is visible without drowning price.
Hover for the brief: long name + directional bias exactly when you need it.
Multi-zigzag sweep, overlap control, bar-ratio verification, max-pattern caps, dark/light aware palette + custom colors.
🧭 Read the Battlefield
AC — Ascending Channel: trend carry; respect higher-lows and ride the lane.
RWE — Rising Wedge: distribution bias; watch the fracture and the retest.
Converging/Diverging Triangles: compression → expansion; stage entries at the edges.
DC — Descending Channel: late down-leg + momentum shift = tactical long.
Structure is the map. Bias is the compass. Your risk plan is the sword.
🤝 Acknowledgments
Original engine & libraries: Trendoscope (legend).
Enhancement layer (UX): transparency, short codes, tooltip system — BK.
Mentor: A.K. — discipline, patience, and clarity. His standard lives in every decision here.
🫡 Give Forward
Don’t be cheap with your knowledge. If my indicators sharpen your edge:
Teach someone how to read formations with discipline.
Share your process, not just screenshots.
Contribute code, context, or courage to those behind you.
A king’s wisdom multiplies the camp. A lion’s courage protects the pride.
🙏 Final Word
“By wise guidance you will wage your war, and victory lies in many counselors.” — Proverbs 24:6
See the array. Choose the strike. Lead with wisdom.
BK AK-Warfare Formations — where formation meets judgment, and judgment meets execution.
Gd bless. 🙏
FiniteStateMachine🟩 OVERVIEW
A flexible framework for creating, testing and implementing a Finite State Machine (FSM) in your script. FSMs use rules to control how states change in response to events.
This is the first Finite State Machine library on TradingView and it's quite a different way to think about your script's logic. Advantages of using this vs hardcoding all your logic include:
• Explicit logic : You can see all rules easily side-by-side.
• Validation : Tables show your rules and validation results right on the chart.
• Dual approach : Simple matrix for straightforward transitions; map implementation for concurrent scenarios. You can combine them for complex needs.
• Type safety : Shows how to use enums for robustness while maintaining string compatibility.
• Real-world examples : Includes both conceptual (traffic lights) and practical (trading strategy) demonstrations.
• Priority control : Explicit control over which rules take precedence when multiple conditions are met.
• Wildcard system : Flexible pattern matching for states and events.
The library seems complex, but it's not really. Your conditions, events, and their potential interactions are complex. The FSM makes them all explicit, which is some work. However, like all "good" pain in life, this is front-loaded, and *saves* pain later, in the form of unintended interactions and bugs that are very hard to find and fix.
🟩 SIMPLE FSM (MATRIX-BASED)
The simple FSM uses a matrix to define transition rules with the structure: state > event > state. We look up the current state, check if the event in that row matches, and if it does, output the resulting state.
Each row in the matrix defines one rule, and the first matching row, counting from the top down, is applied.
A limitation of this method is that you can supply only ONE event.
You can design layered rules using widlcards. Use an empty string "" or the special string "ANY" for any state or event wildcard.
The matrix FSM is foruse where you have clear, sequential state transitions triggered by single events. Think traffic lights, or any logic where only one thing can happen at a time.
The demo for this FSM is of traffic lights.
🟩 CONCURRENT FSM (MAP-BASED)
The map FSM uses a more complex structure where each state is a key in the map, and its value is an array of event rules. Each rule maps a named condition to an output (event or next state).
This FSM can handle multiple conditions simultaneously. Rules added first have higher priority.
Adding more rules to existing states combines the entries in the map (if you use the supplied helper function) rather than overwriting them.
This FSM is for more complex scenarios where multiple conditions can be true simultaneously, and you need to control which takes precedence. Like trading strategies, or any system with concurrent conditions.
The demo for this FSM is a trading strategy.
🟩 HOW TO USE
Pine Script libraries contain reusable code for importing into indicators. You do not need to copy any code out of here. Just import the library and call the function you want.
For example, for version 1 of this library, import it like this:
import SimpleCryptoLife/FiniteStateMachine/1
See the EXAMPLE USAGE sections within the library for examples of calling the functions.
For more information on libraries and incorporating them into your scripts, see the Libraries section of the Pine Script User Manual.
🟩 TECHNICAL IMPLEMENTATION
Both FSM implementations support wildcards using blank strings "" or the special string "ANY". Wildcards match in this priority order:
• Exact state + exact event match
• Exact state + empty event (event wildcard)
• Empty state + exact event (state wildcard)
• Empty state + empty event (full wildcard)
When multiple rules match the same state + event combination, the FIRST rule encountered takes priority. In the matrix FSM, this means row order determines priority. In the map FSM, it's the order you add rules to each state.
The library uses user-defined types for the map FSM:
• o_eventRule : Maps a condition name to an output
• o_eventRuleWrapper : Wraps an array of rules (since maps can't contain arrays directly)
Everything uses strings for maximum library compatibility, though the examples show how to use enums for type safety by converting them to strings.
Unlike normal maps where adding a duplicate key overwrites the value, this library's `m_addRuleToEventMap()` method *combines* rules, making it intuitive to build rule sets without breaking them.
🟩 VALIDATION & ERROR HANDLING
The library includes comprehensive validation functions that catch common FSM design errors:
Error detection:
• Empty next states
• Invalid states not in the states array
• Duplicate rules
• Conflicting transitions
• Unreachable states (no entry/exit rules)
Warning detection:
• Redundant wildcards
• Empty states/events (potential unintended wildcards)
• Duplicate conditions within states
You can display validation results in tables on the chart, with tooltips providing detailed explanations. The helper functions to display the tables are exported so you can call them from your own script.
🟩 PRACTICAL EXAMPLES
The library includes four comprehensive demos:
Traffic Light Demo (Simple FSM) : Uses the matrix FSM to cycle through traffic light states (red → red+amber → green → amber → red) with timer events. Includes pseudo-random "break" events and repair logic to demonstrate wildcards and priority handling.
Trading Strategy Demo (Concurrent FSM) : Implements a realistic long-only trading strategy using BOTH FSM types:
• Map FSM converts multiple technical conditions (EMA crosses, gaps, fractals, RSI) into prioritised events
• Matrix FSM handles state transitions (idle → setup → entry → position → exit → re-entry)
• Includes position management, stop losses, and re-entry logic
Error Demonstrations : Both FSM types include error demos with intentionally malformed rules to showcase the validation system's capabilities.
🟩 BRING ON THE FUNCTIONS
f_printFSMMatrix(_mat_rules, _a_states, _tablePosition)
Prints a table of states and rules to the specified position on the chart. Works only with the matrix-based FSM.
Parameters:
_mat_rules (matrix)
_a_states (array)
_tablePosition (simple string)
Returns: The table of states and rules.
method m_loadMatrixRulesFromText(_mat_rules, _rulesText)
Loads rules into a rules matrix from a multiline string where each line is of the form "current state | event | next state" (ignores empty lines and trims whitespace).
This is the most human-readable way to define rules because it's a visually aligned, table-like format.
Namespace types: matrix
Parameters:
_mat_rules (matrix)
_rulesText (string)
Returns: No explicit return. The matrix is modified as a side-effect.
method m_addRuleToMatrix(_mat_rules, _currentState, _event, _nextState)
Adds a single rule to the rules matrix. This can also be quite readble if you use short variable names and careful spacing.
Namespace types: matrix
Parameters:
_mat_rules (matrix)
_currentState (string)
_event (string)
_nextState (string)
Returns: No explicit return. The matrix is modified as a side-effect.
method m_validateRulesMatrix(_mat_rules, _a_states, _showTable, _tablePosition)
Validates a rules matrix and a states array to check that they are well formed. Works only with the matrix-based FSM.
Checks: matrix has exactly 3 columns; no empty next states; all states defined in array; no duplicate states; no duplicate rules; all states have entry/exit rules; no conflicting transitions; no redundant wildcards. To avoid slowing down the script unnecessarily, call this method once (perhaps using `barstate.isfirst`), when the rules and states are ready.
Namespace types: matrix
Parameters:
_mat_rules (matrix)
_a_states (array)
_showTable (bool)
_tablePosition (simple string)
Returns: `true` if the rules and states are valid; `false` if errors or warnings exist.
method m_getStateFromMatrix(_mat_rules, _currentState, _event, _strictInput, _strictTransitions)
Returns the next state based on the current state and event, or `na` if no matching transition is found. Empty (not na) entries are treated as wildcards if `strictInput` is false.
Priority: exact match > event wildcard > state wildcard > full wildcard.
Namespace types: matrix
Parameters:
_mat_rules (matrix)
_currentState (string)
_event (string)
_strictInput (bool)
_strictTransitions (bool)
Returns: The next state or `na`.
method m_addRuleToEventMap(_map_eventRules, _state, _condName, _output)
Adds a single event rule to the event rules map. If the state key already exists, appends the new rule to the existing array (if different). If the state key doesn't exist, creates a new entry.
Namespace types: map
Parameters:
_map_eventRules (map)
_state (string)
_condName (string)
_output (string)
Returns: No explicit return. The map is modified as a side-effect.
method m_addEventRulesToMapFromText(_map_eventRules, _configText)
Loads event rules from a multiline text string into a map structure.
Format: "state | condName > output | condName > output | ..." . Pairs are ordered by priority. You can have multiple rules on the same line for one state.
Supports wildcards: Use an empty string ("") or the special string "ANY" for state or condName to create wildcard rules.
Examples: " | condName > output" (state wildcard), "state | > output" (condition wildcard), " | > output" (full wildcard).
Splits lines by \n, extracts state as key, creates/appends to array with new o_eventRule(condName, output).
Call once, e.g., on barstate.isfirst for best performance.
Namespace types: map
Parameters:
_map_eventRules (map)
_configText (string)
Returns: No explicit return. The map is modified as a side-effect.
f_printFSMMap(_map_eventRules, _a_states, _tablePosition)
Prints a table of map-based event rules to the specified position on the chart.
Parameters:
_map_eventRules (map)
_a_states (array)
_tablePosition (simple string)
Returns: The table of map-based event rules.
method m_validateEventRulesMap(_map_eventRules, _a_states, _a_validEvents, _showTable, _tablePosition)
Validates an event rules map to check that it's well formed.
Checks: map is not empty; wrappers contain non-empty arrays; no duplicate condition names per state; no empty fields in o_eventRule objects; optionally validates outputs against matrix events.
NOTE: Both "" and "ANY" are treated identically as wildcards for both states and conditions.
To avoid slowing down the script unnecessarily, call this method once (perhaps using `barstate.isfirst`), when the map is ready.
Namespace types: map
Parameters:
_map_eventRules (map)
_a_states (array)
_a_validEvents (array)
_showTable (bool)
_tablePosition (simple string)
Returns: `true` if the event rules map is valid; `false` if errors or warnings exist.
method m_getEventFromConditionsMap(_currentState, _a_activeConditions, _map_eventRules)
Returns a single event or state string based on the current state and active conditions.
Uses a map of event rules where rules are pre-sorted by implicit priority via load order.
Supports wildcards using empty string ("") or "ANY" for flexible rule matching.
Priority: exact match > condition wildcard > state wildcard > full wildcard.
Namespace types: series string, simple string, input string, const string
Parameters:
_currentState (string)
_a_activeConditions (array)
_map_eventRules (map)
Returns: The output string (event or state) for the first matching condition, or na if no match found.
o_eventRule
o_eventRule defines a condition-to-output mapping for the concurrent FSM.
Fields:
condName (series string) : The name of the condition to check.
output (series string) : The output (event or state) when the condition is true.
o_eventRuleWrapper
o_eventRuleWrapper wraps an array of o_eventRule for use as map values (maps cannot contain collections directly).
Fields:
a_rules (array) : Array of o_eventRule objects for a specific state.
Fundamentals PanelFundamentals Panel Description
The Fundamentals Panel is a versatile Pine Script indicator that displays key financial metrics—Market Cap, P/E Ratio, P/S Ratio, and PEG Ratio—in a clean, customizable table on your TradingView chart. Designed for investors and traders, this tool brings essential company fundamentals directly to your chart, saving time and enhancing decision-making.
Quick Insights: View critical valuation metrics (Market Cap, P/E, P/S, PEG) at a glance without leaving your chart, ideal for fundamental analysis or screening stocks.
Customizable Display: Toggle each metric on or off via input settings to focus on what matters most to your strategy.
Adjustable Font Size: Choose from Small, Normal, or Large text sizes to ensure readability suits your chart setup and screen preferences.
Reliable Data: Pulls data directly from TradingView’s financial database, using diluted shares and trailing metrics for accuracy across most stocks.
Debugging Support: Includes hidden plots (visible in the Data Window) to verify raw data like shares outstanding, revenue, and PEG, helping you trust the numbers.
How It Works
The indicator fetches:
Market Cap: Calculated using diluted shares outstanding and current price.
P/E Ratio: Price divided by trailing twelve-month (TTM) diluted EPS.
P/S Ratio: Market cap divided by TTM total revenue.
PEG Ratio: Trailing PEG from TradingView’s data, with an additional calculated PEG for cross-checking.
FOMC Fund Rate 2022–2025(0.1)This indicator visualizes the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meetings from 2022 through 2025.
It plots vertical lines on the announcement dates and attaches labels showing:
The decision (rate hike ⭡, cut ⭣, or hold ⭤).
The size of the rate change in percentage points.
The cumulative Federal Funds Rate path in parentheses.
Features:
Accurate timestamps for each FOMC meeting (UTC+1).
Customizable line style, width, and color.
Label color and text color options.
Placeholder labels for future meetings to maintain the timeline.
Use this script to keep track of historical Fed policy decisions and visualize the rate path over time directly on your chart.
ICT Silver Bullet Zones (All Sessions, Custom Labels)CT Silver Bullet Zones
This indicator is designed for traders who follow the ICT *Silver Bullet* concept.
It automatically marks the **Silver Bullet window** (10:00–11:00 by default) across the **London, New York AM, New York PM, and Asia sessions**, with customizable settings for each session.
### Features:
* Separate adjustable time windows for **London, NY AM, NY PM, and Asia Silver Bullet sessions**.
* Colored session boxes with individual **opacity controls**.
* **Session labels placed at the top** of each zone, with customizable text size, color, and background opacity.
* Works on all timeframes and highlights only the Silver Bullet trading windows.
This tool is meant to help traders quickly identify ICT Silver Bullet opportunities in all major sessions without manual plotting.
Chartlense Dashboard (Data, Trend & Levels)Chartlense Dashboard (Data, Trend & Levels)
Overview
This dashboard is designed to solve two common problems for traders: chart clutter and the manual drawing of support and resistance levels . It consolidates critical data from multiple indicators into a clean table overlay and automatically plots the most relevant S&R levels based on recent price action. The primary goal is to provide a clear, at-a-glance overview of the market's structure and data.
It offers both a vertical and horizontal layout to fit any trader's workspace.
Key Concepts & Calculations Explained
This indicator is more than a simple collection of values; it synthesizes data to provide unique insights. Here’s a conceptual look at how its core components work:
Automatic Support & Resistance (Pivot-Based):
The dashed support (green) and resistance (red) lines are not manually drawn. They are dynamically calculated based on the most recent confirmed pivot highs and pivot lows . A pivot is a foundational concept in technical analysis that identifies potential turning points in price action.
How it works: A pivot high is a candle whose `high` is higher than a specific number of candles to its left and right (the "Pivot Lookback" is set to 5 by default in the settings). A pivot low is the inverse. By automatically identifying these confirmed structural points, the script visualizes the most relevant levels of potential supply and demand on the chart.
Relative Volume (RVOL):
This value in the table is not the standard volume. It measures the current bar's volume against its recent average (specifically, `current volume / 10-period simple moving average of volume`).
Interpretation: A reading above 2.0 (indicated by green text) suggests that the current volume is more than double the recent average. This technique is used to identify significant volume spikes, which can add conviction to breakouts or signal potential market climaxes.
Consolidated Data for Context:
Other values displayed in the table, such as the EMAs (9, 20, 200) , Bollinger Bands (20, 2) , RSI (14) , MACD (12, 26, 9) , and VWAP (on intraday charts), use their standard industry calculations. They are included to provide a complete contextual picture without needing to load each indicator separately, saving valuable chart space.
How to Use This in Your Trading
This dashboard is designed as a tool for confluence and context , not as a standalone signal generator. Here are some ways to integrate it into your analysis workflow:
As a Trend Filter: Before considering a trade, quickly glance at the EMAs and the MACD values in the table. A price above the key EMAs and a positive MACD can serve as a quick confirmation that you are aligned with the dominant trend.
To Validate Breakouts: When the price is approaching a key Resistance level (red pivot line), watch the RVOL value . A reading above 2.0 on the breakout candle adds significant confirmation that the move is backed by strong interest. The same logic applies to breakdowns below a support level.
To Spot Potential Reversals: Confluence is key. For example, if the price is testing a Support level (green pivot line) AND the RSI in the table is approaching oversold levels (e.g., near 30), it can signal a higher probability reversal setup.
About This Indicator
This indicator was developed by the team at ChartLense to help traders declutter their charts and focus on the data that matters. We believe in making complex analysis more accessible and organized. We hope this free tool is a valuable addition to your trading process.
Futures Tick & Point Value [BoredYeti]Futures Tick & Point Value
This utility displays tick size, dollars per tick, and (optionally) a per-point row for the current futures contract.
Features
• Hardcoded $/tick map for common CME/NYMEX/CBOT/COMEX contracts
• Automatic fallback using pointvalue * mintick for any other symbol
• Table settings: adjustable position, text size, customizable colors
• Optional “Per Point” row showing ticks and $/point
Notes
• Contract specs can vary by broker/exchange and may change over time. Always confirm with official specifications.
• Educational tool only; not financial advice.
AInfluence Manual Data Input Utility Indicator V101AInfluence (Manual Data Input Utility Indicator) V101
Overview
This utility indicator enables you to plot an external data series directly on your TradingView chart. It is designed for users who want to correlate custom datasets, such as sentiment analysis, economic data, or other external metrics, with price action.
Instructions
1. Add the indicator to your chart.
2. Go into the indicator's "Settings" panel.
3. Paste your pre-formatted data into the text input field.
Data Formatting Rules
The script requires a specific format for each data point, which consists of a numerical value and a timestamp
• Structure: Each data point must be on a new line.
• Limit: You can paste a maximum of 146 records.
Example Data:
93.1562,2025-09-06 00:59:11
94.9062,2025-09-06 01:59:21
93.4062,2025-09-06 02:59:18
95.2188,2025-09-06 03:59:31
93.4062,2025-09-06 04:59:21
91.4583,2025-09-06 05:58:51
93.7812,2025-09-06 06:59:17
The source code for this indicator is open and accessible.
ICT 00:00, 08:30, 09:30 & 13:30 Opens (NY) — Prior-Day HistoryICT 00:00, 08:30, 09:30 & 13:30 Opens (NY)
This is a derivative of ALPHAICTRADER’s open-source script, republished under the MPL-2.0 with clear attribution and documented changes. It plots four New-York–anchored intraday reference levels—0000, 0830, 0930, 1330—as short, right-padded stubs with clean side labels. Use these time anchors (ICT-style midnight + key US windows) to frame bias, volatility pockets, and intraday trade locations.
What’s original in this version (changes)
Right-padded stubs instead of chart-wide rays — each level ends N bars past the latest candle (configurable).
Side labels at the line tip — text-only labels (0000, 0830, 0930, 1330) that sit at the right end of each stub and update every bar.
Optional prior-day history — show Today only or Today + Prior Day; older lines/labels auto-pruned.
Per-anchor controls — Display, Style, Color, Width, and Show Label for each time.
What it plots (and why)
0000 (NY Midnight): daily session anchor for bias/liquidity context.
0830 (NY): macro data window (CPI/NFP/claims) where volatility often concentrates.
0930 (NY): US cash equity market open; opening-drive structure/acceptance tests.
1330 (NY): early-afternoon anchor for continuation vs. fade.
How it works (under the hood)
Session detection: time("1", session, "America/New_York"); first bar flagged via not na(ts) and na(ts ).
Anchor price: open of that first bar per session/day.
Rendering: lines drawn with xloc=bar_index from start bar to bar_index + Right Pad; x2 updates every bar (no extend.right).
Labels: placed at line.get_x2(line) + Label Pad, soft color variant; updated per bar to stay on the tip.
History: arrays keep either today only or today + yesterday and delete anything older immediately.
How to use
Add to any intraday chart (futures/FX/indices). Anchors are always NY-time; TradingView handles DST.
Inputs
00:00 / 08:30 / 09:30 / 13:30 (NY): Display, Line Style, Color, Width, Show Label
Right Edge: Right Pad (bars) · Label Pad (bars)
History: Show Prior Day (History) — off = today only; on = today + yesterday
Suggested pads: Right Pad 2–5 bars; Label Pad 0–2.
These are context anchors, not signals. Combine with your execution model (market structure, liquidity, FVG/OBs, etc.).
Attribution & License (MPL-2.0)
Original work: “ICT NEW YORK MIDNIGHT OPEN AND 8.30 AM OPEN” by ALPHAICTRADER (MPL-2.0).
This derivative: modifications listed above; source published and kept under MPL-2.0 per license terms.
If you distribute a modified version of this Pine file, you must keep MPL-2.0, retain the copyright/licensing header, publish your modified source, and document your changes.
Notes: Pine v5. Minimalist (no day dividers). Educational tool; not financial advice.
Copyright: © ALPHAICTRADER 2022 · © Funk 2025
License: MPL-2.0
Recovery StrategyDescription:
The Recovery Strategy is a long-only trading system designed to capitalize on significant price drops from recent highs. It enters a position when the price falls 10% or more from the highest high over a 6-month lookback period and adds positions on further 2% drops, up to a maximum of 5 positions. Each trade is held for 6 months before exiting, regardless of profit or loss. The strategy uses margin to amplify position sizes, with a default leverage of 5:1 (20% margin requirement). All key parameters are customizable via inputs, allowing flexibility for different assets and timeframes. Visual markers indicate recent highs for reference.
How It Works:
Entry: Buys when the closing price drops 10% or more from the recent high (highest high in the lookback period, default 126 bars ~6 months). If already in a position, additional buys occur on further 2% drops (e.g., 12%, 14%, 16%, 18%), up to 5 positions (pyramiding).
Exit: Each trade exits after its own holding period (default 126 bars ~6 months), regardless of profit or loss. No stop loss or take-profit is used.
Margin: Uses leverage to control larger positions (default 20% margin, 5:1 leverage). The order size is a percentage of equity (default 100%), adjustable via inputs.
Visualization: Displays blue markers (without text) at new recent highs to highlight reference levels.
Inputs:
Lookback Period for High Peak (bars): Number of bars to look back for the recent high (default: 126, ~6 months on daily charts).
Initial Drop Percentage to Buy (%): Percentage drop from recent high to trigger the first buy (default: 10.0%).
Additional Drop Percentage to Buy (%): Further drop percentage to add positions (default: 2.0%).
Holding Period (bars): Number of bars to hold each position before selling (default: 126, ~6 months).
Order Size (% of Equity): Percentage of equity used per trade (default: 100%).
Margin for Long Positions (%): Percentage of position value covered by equity (default: 20%, equivalent to 5:1 leverage).
Usage:
Timeframe: Designed for daily charts (126 bars ~6 months). Adjust Lookback Period and Holding Period for other timeframes (e.g., 1008 hours for hourly charts, assuming 8 trading hours/day).
Assets: Suitable for stocks, ETFs, or other assets with significant price volatility. Test thoroughly on your chosen asset.
Settings: Customize inputs in the strategy settings to match your risk tolerance and market conditions. For example, lower Margin for Long Positions (e.g., to 10% for 10:1 leverage) to increase position sizes, but beware of higher risk.
Backtesting: Use TradingView’s Strategy Tester to evaluate performance. Check the “List of Trades” for skipped trades due to insufficient equity or margin requirements.
Risks and Considerations:
No Stop Loss: The strategy holds trades for the full 6 months without a stop loss, exposing it to significant drawdowns in prolonged downtrends.
Margin Risk: Leverage (default 5:1) amplifies both profits and losses. Ensure sufficient equity to cover margin requirements to avoid skipped trades or simulated margin calls.
Pyramiding: Up to 5 positions can be open simultaneously, increasing exposure. Adjust pyramiding in the code if fewer positions are desired (e.g., change to pyramiding=3).
Market Conditions: Performance depends on price drops and recoveries. Test on historical data to assess effectiveness in your market.
Broker Emulator: TradingView’s paper trading simulates margin but does not execute real margin trading. Results may differ in live trading due to broker-specific margin rules.
How to Use:
Add the strategy to your chart in TradingView.
Adjust input parameters in the settings panel to suit your asset, timeframe, and risk preferences.
Run a backtest in the Strategy Tester to evaluate performance.
Monitor open positions and margin levels in the Trading Panel to manage risk.
For live trading, consult your broker’s margin requirements and leverage policies, as TradingView’s simulation may not match real-world conditions.
Disclaimer:
This strategy is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Trading involves significant risk, especially with leverage and no stop loss. Always backtest thoroughly and consult a financial advisor before using any strategy in live trading.
ATR %Overview
Shows the Average True Range (ATR) as a percentage of a chosen price basis. Useful for a quick, apples-to-apples view of current volatility across symbols and timeframes. The value is displayed in a clean table at the bottom-right of the chart.
What it shows
Basis can be: Close, EMA(len), SMA(len), or VWAP.
Data timeframe can be the Chart timeframe or a Daily aggregation.
Inputs
ATR length (len) – ATR lookback.
Percent basis – Close / EMA / SMA / VWAP.
Data timeframe – Chart (uses the current chart TF) or Daily (computes ATR and basis from daily data).
Decimals – number of decimal places to display.
Text / Background / Frame colors – customize the table appearance.
Notes
In Daily mode, ATR and basis are taken from daily data and update on daily close.
VWAP is available only in Chart mode (Daily + VWAP will show n/a by design).
The script overlays the chart but does not plot lines—only a compact info box.
Use cases
Compare volatility across coins/stocks quickly using ATR% instead of raw ATR.
Switch basis to match your style (e.g., EMA for trend-aware scaling, VWAP for intraday context).
Set Daily to track higher-timeframe volatility while trading lower TFs.
Disclaimer
For educational purposes only. Not financial advice. Trading involves risk.
IU Trade ManagementDESCRIPTION
IU Trade Management is a powerful utility tool designed to help traders manage their trades with precision and clarity. It provides automated Stop Loss, Take Profit, and Break Even calculations using multiple customizable methods. Along with clear SL/TP plotting on the chart, it also displays a detailed trade status table that tracks every important detail including entry price, SL/TP levels, break-even, PNL, and trade duration. This tool is perfect for traders who want to manage risk and rewards visually and systematically.
USER INPUTS :
-Entry Candle Time: Default 20 Jul 2021 00:00 +0300 (select the candle from which the trade begins)
- Entry Price: Default 2333 (define the price at which the trade is executed)
- Trade Direction: Default Long (choose between Long or Short)
- SL/TP Method: Default ATR (options: ATR, Points/Pips, Percentage %, Standard Deviation, Highest/Lowest, Previous High/Low)
- Risk to Reward: Default 3 (set custom risk-to-reward ratio)
- Use Break Even: Default false (option to enable break-even)
- Plot Break Even Line: Default false (option to display BE line)
- RTR of Break Even Point: Default 2 (factor used for BE calculation)
SL/TP Method Specific Inputs:
- ATR Length: Default 14
- ATR Factor: Default 2
- Points/Pips: Default 100
- Percentage: Default 1%
- Standard Deviation Length: Default 20
- Standard Deviation Factor: Default 2
- Highest/Lowest Length: Default 10
Trade Status Table Settings:
- Show Trade Status: Default true
- Table Size: Default small (options: normal, tiny, small, large)
- Table Position: Default top right
- Frame Width: Default 2
- Table Color: Default black
- Frame Color: Default gray
- Border Width: Default 2
- Border Color: Default gray
- Text Color: Default purple (RGB 212, 0, 255)
HOW TO USE THE INDICATOR:
1. Set the entry candle time and entry price manually.
2. Select whether the trade is Long or Short.
3. Choose the preferred SL/TP calculation method (ATR, Percentage, Points, STD, High/Low, Previous High/Low).
4. Define your risk-to-reward ratio and enable break-even if required.
5. The indicator will automatically plot your Entry, Stop Loss, Take Profit, and Break Even levels on the chart.
6. A detailed trade management table will appear, showing trade direction, SL, TP, PNL (points and %), SL/TP method, and total trade time.
WHY IT IS UNIQUE:
- Offers multiple methods to calculate SL and TP (ATR, Percentage, Points, Standard Deviation, High/Low, Previous High/Low)
- Built-in Break Even functionality for risk-free trade management
- Real-time PNL tracking in both points and percentage
- Trade status table for complete transparency on all trade details
- Visual plotting of SL, TP, and Entry with color-coded zones for clarity
HOW USER CAN BENEFIT FROM IT :
- Helps traders manage risk and reward with discipline
- Eliminates guesswork by automating SL and TP levels
- Provides clear visual guidance on trade exits and risk management
- Enhances decision-making with live trade tracking and performance statistics
- Suitable for manual traders as a trade manager and for strategy developers as a risk management reference
Transformer Flux DashboardHere’s a practical guide to what your Transformer Flux Dashboard does and how to use it.
What it is
A compact, two-column trading dashboard + signal pack that blends trend, MACD, and OBV into one view (“Flux Score”) and adds session awareness (pre-sessions and main sessions in Eastern time). It’s designed for regular candles by default and avoids repaint by letting you confirm on bar close.
Core pieces it calculates
Moving Averages
Two MAs: Fast (HMA/EMA) and Slow (HMA/EMA).
You choose length, line width, color, and transparency.
Trend engine (Strict/Lenient)
Uses the relation between Fast/Slow MA and a debounced fast-MA slope filter (slope > ATR×buffer).
Strict: requires fast>slow and slow rising (or the inverse for down).
Lenient: fast>slow or slow rising (or the inverse).
A confirmation window (bars) must hold true before trend flips. That window can be auto-tuned by session (Asia/London/NY) or set globally.
OBV confirmation (optional)
OBV smoothed by SMA; needs to be rising/falling for N bars (also session-aware if you enable presets).
MACD
Standard MACD Fast/Slow/Signal; the dashboard shows Bull ▲, Bear ▼ or Flat based on line vs signal.
Flux Score (top row)
A composite, smoothed gauge from 0–100:
40% Trend, 30% MACD, 30% OBV → EMA(3) smoothed.
Labels: Bullish ≥ 70, Bearish ≤ 30, otherwise Neutral.
Summary line explains why (e.g., “MACD↑, OBV↑, Trend up”).
Sessions & zones (Eastern/NY time)
Recognizes Asia / London / New York main sessions and pre-sessions using your chart’s Eastern time.
Session label (top of chart): text is white; background auto-matches the current session color (or your manual color).
Zone backgrounds (optional): off by default; when on, default transparency ≈ 95% (very light), with separate colors for each session and pre-session. A toggle lets you draw pre-session on top or beneath main sessions.
Signals & markers
Two strength tiers: Strong (Trend + OBV + MACD aligned) and Weak (2 of the 3 agree).
To reduce clutter, markers only appear on direction shifts (from last visible direction to a new one), and you can enforce a minimum bar gap.
Marker style:
Default Icons with LabelUp/LabelDown (tiny).
Colors: strong long = bright white by default; others configurable.
Weak markers are slightly offset from price using ATR so they don’t overlap wicks.
Dashboard (2-column)
Left column = label, right column = value:
Flux Score: numeric + Bullish/Neutral/Bearish tag.
Summary: short reason of the score.
Trend: UP / DOWN / FLAT (cell tinted green/red/gray).
MACD: Bull ▲ / Bear ▼ / Flat (tinted).
Signal: last printed signal + bar age (fresh signals get a lighter tint).
MA: slow MA type/length and up/down arrow.
Sess: current session label (e.g., “Pre-London”, “New York”).
VIX / VXN (optional): shows current value.
Auto tint: based on calm/watch/elevated thresholds (you control levels and colors).
Manual tint: fixed BG color if you prefer consistency.
Params: “P”=trend bars, “O”=OBV bars, mode (Strict/Lenient), and “Candles”.
You can set a global Default Transparency for the dashboard cells.
Key settings to know
Confirm On Close: when on (default), trend/OBV/MACD states use the last confirmed bar; this avoids mid-bar flicker and reduces repaint risk.
Session presets: when enabled, the number of bars required for confirmations tightens/loosens per session (e.g., Asia uses more bars than NY).
Colors & Opacity:
MA lines have their own transparency (default 0 = fully opaque).
Dashboard cells use a single global transparency (default 40%).
Session zones default to very light (95%) and are off by default.
VIX/VXN cells can auto-color by regime or use a manual background.
Markers:
“Icons” vs “Ticks.” Default is Icons with tiny labels up/down.
“Shift only” display reduces noise; you can also set min bar spacing.
How to read it (quick workflow)
Flux Score row: a fast “risk-on/off” gauge.
≥70 with green Trend/MACD cells → higher-conviction long context.
≤30 with red Trend/MACD cells → higher-conviction short context.
Summary explains why the score is what it is.
Signal row: tells you the last official signal and how many bars ago it fired. Fresh signals tint lighter.
MA row: aligns your slow baseline; arrow helps spot slow-turns early.
Sess row + label: know which market is active; behavior and your confirmation bars adapt by session if presets are on.
VIX/VXN (if enabled): extra context for risk regime (values and color band).
Good practices & caveats
It’s confirmation-based to reduce false flips; you’ll get signals slightly later, by design.
All signals are informational; there’s no position management or stops in this build (we removed the stop visuals by request).
If you switch to exotic chart types or extreme resolutions, re-tune lengths and confirmation bars (and potentially disable session presets).
For scalping, consider reducing confirmation bars and OBV smoothing; for higher timeframes, increase them.
Quick customization ideas
Want faster flips? Lower confirmBars and obvBars, increase slope buffer a bit to retain quality.
Want fewer weak signals? Show only strong markers (toggle off weak via colors/visibility or increase min bar gap).
Prefer EMA stacking? Set both Fast/Slow to EMA.
Don’t care about OBV? Turn OBV confirm off; Trend + MACD will drive
RSI ADX Bollinger Analysis High-level purpose and design philosophy
This indicator — RSI-ADX-Bollinger Analysis — is a compact, educational market-analysis toolkit that blends momentum (RSI), trend strength (ADX), volatility structure (Bollinger Bands) and simple volumetrics to provide traders a snapshot of market condition and trade idea quality. The design philosophy is explicit and layered: use each component to answer a different question about price action (momentum, conviction, volatility, participation), then combine answers to form a more robust, explainable signal. The mashup is intended for analysis and learning, not automatic execution: it surfaces the why behind signals so traders can test, learn and apply rules with risk management.
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What each indicator contributes (component-by-component)
RSI (Relative Strength Index) — role and behavior: RSI measures short-term momentum by comparing recent gains to recent losses. A high RSI (near or above the overbought threshold) indicates strong recent buying pressure and potential exhaustion if price is extended. A low RSI (near or below the oversold threshold) indicates strong recent selling pressure and potential exhaustion or a value area for mean-reversion. In this dashboard RSI is used as the primary momentum trigger: it helps identify whether price is locally over-extended on the buy or sell side.
ADX (Average Directional Index) — role and behavior: ADX measures trend strength independently of direction. When ADX rises above a chosen threshold (e.g., 25), it signals that the market is trending with conviction; ADX below the threshold suggests range or weak trend. Because patterns and momentum signals perform differently in trending vs. ranging markets, ADX is used here as a filter: only when ADX indicates sufficient directional strength does the system treat RSI+BB breakouts as meaningful trade candidates.
Bollinger Bands — role and behavior: Bollinger Bands (20-period basis ± N standard deviations) show volatility envelope and relative price position vs. a volatility-adjusted mean. Price outside the upper band suggests pronounced extension relative to recent volatility; price outside the lower band suggests extended weakness. A band expansion (increasing width) signals volatility breakout potential; contraction signals range-bound conditions and potential squeeze. In this dashboard, Bollinger Bands provide the volatility/structural context: RSI extremes plus price beyond the band imply a stronger, volatility-backed move.
Volume split & basic MA trend — role and behavior: Buy-like and sell-like volume (simple heuristic using close>open or closeopen) or sell-like (close1.2 for validation and compare win rate and expectancy.
4. TF alignment: Accept signals only when higher timeframe (e.g., 4h) trend agrees — compare results.
5. Parameter sensitivity: Vary RSI threshold (70/30 vs 80/20), Bollinger stddev (2 vs 2.5), and ADX threshold (25 vs 30) and measure stability of results.
These exercises teach both statistical thinking and the specific failure modes of the mashup.
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Limitations, failure modes and caveats (explicit & teachable)
• ADX and Bollinger measures lag during fast-moving news events — signals can be late or wrong during earnings, macro shocks, or illiquid sessions.
• Volume classification by open/close is a heuristic; it does not equal TAPEDATA, footprint or signed volume. Use it as supportive evidence, not definitive proof.
• RSI can remain overbought or oversold for extended stretches in persistent trends — relying solely on RSI extremes without ADX or BB context invites large drawdowns.
• Small-cap or low-liquidity instruments yield noisy band behavior and unreliable volume ratios.
Being explicit about these limitations is a strong point in a TradingView description — it demonstrates transparency and educational intent.
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Originality & mashup justification (text you can paste)
This script intentionally combines classical momentum (RSI), volatility envelope (Bollinger Bands) and trend-strength (ADX) because each indicator answers a different and complementary question: RSI answers is price locally extreme?, Bollinger answers is price outside normal volatility?, and ADX answers is the market moving with conviction?. Volume participation then acts as a practical check for real market involvement. This combination is not a simple “indicator mashup”; it is a designed ensemble where each element reduces the others’ failure modes and together produce a teachable, testable signal framework. The script’s purpose is educational and analytical — to show traders how to interpret the interplay of momentum, volatility, and trend strength.
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TradingView publication guidance & compliance checklist
To satisfy TradingView rules about mashups and descriptions, include the following items in your script description (without exposing source code):
1. Purpose statement: One or two lines describing the script’s objective (educational multi-indicator market overview and idea filter).
2. Component list: Name the major modules (RSI, Bollinger Bands, ADX, volume heuristic, SMA trend checks, signal tracking) and one-sentence reason for each.
3. How they interact: A succinct non-code explanation: “RSI finds momentum extremes; Bollinger confirms volatility expansion; ADX confirms trend strength; all three must align for a BUY/SELL.”
4. Inputs: List adjustable inputs (RSI length and thresholds, BB length & stddev, ADX threshold & smoothing, volume MA, table position/size).
5. Usage instructions: Short workflow (check TF alignment → confirm participation → define stop & R:R → backtest).
6. Limitations & assumptions: Explicitly state volume is approximated, ADX has lag, and avoid promising guaranteed profits.
7. Non-promotional language: No external contact info, ads, claims of exclusivity or guaranteed outcomes.
8. Trademark clause: If you used trademark symbols, remove or provide registration proof.
9. Risk disclaimer: Add the copy-ready disclaimer below.
This matches TradingView’s request for meaningful descriptions that explain originality and inter-component reasoning.
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Copy-ready short publication description (paste into TradingView)
Advanced RSI-ADX-Bollinger Market Overview — educational multi-indicator dashboard. This script combines RSI (momentum extremes), Bollinger Bands (volatility envelope and band expansion), ADX (trend strength), simple SMA trend bias and a basic buy/sell volume heuristic to surface high-quality idea candidates. Signals require alignment of momentum, volatility expansion and rising ADX; volume participation is displayed to support signal confidence. Inputs are configurable (RSI length/levels, BB length/stddev, ADX length/threshold, volume MA, display options). This tool is intended for analysis and learning — not for automated execution. Users should back test and apply robust risk management. Limitations: volume classification here is a heuristic (close>open), ADX and BB measures lag in fast news events, and results vary by instrument liquidity.
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Copy-ready risk & misuse disclaimer (paste into description or help file)
This script is provided for educational and analytical purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. It does not guarantee profits. Indicators are heuristics and may give false or late signals; always back test and paper-trade before using real capital. The author is not responsible for trading losses resulting from the use or misuse of this indicator. Use proper position sizing and risk controls.
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Risk Disclaimer: This tool is provided for education and analysis only. It is not financial advice and does not guarantee returns. Users assume all risk for trades made based on this script. Back test thoroughly and use proper risk management.
SMA ProjectionWhat it does
Draws a linear projection of a Simple Moving Average (SMA) 20 bars into the future using the SMA’s recent slope. Optionally shows a tiny momentum flag (just a number) positioned 0.75× ATR below the SMA on the last bar. No future data is read; everything updates on the current bar only.
How it works
SMA: Standard SMA on your chosen source and length.
Projection (fixed 20 bars): Uses a linear extrapolation from the last SMA value with slope
slope = (ma - ma ) / slopeLen
Momentum magnitude (optional): A signed number where >0 = up-slope, <0 = down-slope, ~0 = flat. Units are selectable: price/bar, %/bar, or ATR/bar (default). The flag is rendered small and colored teal (pos) / red (neg) / gray (flat).
Key features
Fixed 20-bar projection (no input—keeps it simple and comparable).
Tiny numeric momentum flag (off by default) placed well below the line (0.75× ATR).
Unit choices for momentum: price/bar, %/bar, ATR/bar.
Deadband option to zero-out tiny slopes.
Non-repainting projection: drawn only on the last bar; updates each candle.
Inputs (summary)
SMA length and Source
Slope lookback (for magnitude)
Show momentum flag (default: Off)
Magnitude units: price/bar, %/bar, ATR/bar (default)
Deadband and Decimals for display control
Tips
For smoother projections, increase slope lookback; for responsiveness, decrease it.
Use ATR/bar or %/bar if you want momentum values that are more comparable across symbols and timeframes.
The projection is indicative, not predictive—combine with structure, volume, and risk management.
Notes & limits
The “future” line is just a linear extrapolation from recent behavior; regime shifts will break linearity.
The momentum flag text is intentionally minimal to avoid chart clutter.
Works on any timeframe; the projection distance is always 20 bars on that timeframe.
Tags: SMA, moving average, projection, slope, momentum, ATR, extrapolation, non-repainting, trading tools
ORB Breakout Traffic Signal (5/15/30)ORB Breakout Traffic Signal (5/15/30)
This indicator visualizes Opening Range Breakouts (ORB) for the first 5, 15, and 30 minutes of the US regular trading session (09:30–16:00 ET).
It provides a compact, easy-to-read traffic signal table on your chart to show whether price is breaking out, breaking down, or consolidating inside the range.
🔑 Features
Auto-anchors at 09:30 ET (converted to your local time automatically).
Tracks ORB High/Low for:
5-minute window (09:30–09:34)
15-minute window (09:30–09:44)
30-minute window (09:30–09:59)
Displays results in a compact table:
↑ (green) → price has broken above the ORB high
↓ (red) → price has broken below the ORB low
• (gray) → price remains inside the ORB range (optional; can be disabled)
Customizable:
Toggle which ORBs to show (5m, 15m, 30m)
Choose table position (top/bottom left/right)
Adjustable text size
Option to plot the ORB High/Low lines on your chart
📌 Usage
Designed for intraday traders watching US equities/ETFs/futures.
Works best on 1-minute or 5-minute charts with Extended Hours turned OFF (so the session starts exactly at 09:30 ET).
Helps you quickly spot early breakouts (5m), mid-session trends (15m), or confirmed directional moves (30m).
⚠️ Notes
Signals only update during the RTH session
Outside market hours, the last locked ORB and signal remain displayed until the next open.
This tool is for analysis/visualization only; not a buy/sell signal. Always combine with your own trading strategy and risk management.
👉 Perfect for traders who want a quick visual confirmation of whether price is breaking out of the opening range or stuck inside it.
Hilly's Advanced Crypto Scalping Strategy - 5 Min ChartTo determine the "best" input parameters for the Advanced Crypto Scalping Strategy on a 5-minute chart, we need to consider the goals of optimizing for profitability, minimizing false signals, and adapting to the volatile nature of cryptocurrencies. The default parameters in the script are a starting point, but the optimal values depend on the specific cryptocurrency pair, market conditions, and your risk tolerance. Below, I'll provide recommended input values based on common practices in crypto scalping, along with reasoning for each parameter. I’ll also suggest how to fine-tune them using TradingView’s backtesting and optimization tools.
Recommended Input Parameters
These values are tailored for a 5-minute chart for liquid cryptocurrencies like BTC/USD or ETH/USD on exchanges like Binance or Coinbase. They aim to balance signal frequency and accuracy for day trading.
Fast EMA Length (emaFastLen): 9
Reasoning: A 9-period EMA is commonly used in scalping to capture short-term price movements while remaining sensitive to recent price action. It reacts faster than the default 10, aligning with the 5-minute timeframe.
Slow EMA Length (emaSlowLen): 21
Reasoning: A 21-period EMA provides a good balance for identifying the broader trend on a 5-minute chart. It’s slightly longer than the default 20 to reduce noise while confirming the trend direction.
RSI Length (rsiLen): 14
Reasoning: The default 14-period RSI is a standard choice for momentum analysis. It works well for detecting overbought/oversold conditions without being too sensitive on short timeframes.
RSI Overbought (rsiOverbought): 75
Reasoning: Raising the overbought threshold to 75 (from 70) reduces false sell signals in strong bullish trends, which are common in crypto markets.
RSI Oversold (rsiOversold): 25
Reasoning: Lowering the oversold threshold to 25 (from 30) filters out weaker buy signals, ensuring entries occur during stronger reversals.
MACD Fast Length (macdFast): 12
Reasoning: The default 12-period fast EMA for MACD is effective for capturing short-term momentum shifts in crypto, aligning with scalping goals.
MACD Slow Length (macdSlow): 26
Reasoning: The default 26-period slow EMA is a standard setting that works well for confirming momentum trends without lagging too much.
MACD Signal Smoothing (macdSignal): 9
Reasoning: The default 9-period signal line is widely used and provides a good balance for smoothing MACD crossovers on a 5-minute chart.
Bollinger Bands Length (bbLen): 20
Reasoning: The default 20-period Bollinger Bands are effective for identifying volatility breakouts, which are key for scalping in crypto markets.
Bollinger Bands Multiplier (bbMult): 2.0
Reasoning: A 2.0 multiplier is standard and captures most price action within the bands. Increasing it to 2.5 could reduce signals but improve accuracy in highly volatile markets.
Stop Loss % (slPerc): 0.8%
Reasoning: A tighter stop loss of 0.8% (from 1.0%) suits the high volatility of crypto, helping to limit losses on false breakouts while keeping risk manageable.
Take Profit % (tpPerc): 1.5%
Reasoning: A 1.5% take-profit target (from 2.0%) aligns with scalping’s goal of capturing small, frequent gains. Crypto markets often see quick reversals, so a smaller target increases the likelihood of hitting profits.
Use Candlestick Patterns (useCandlePatterns): True
Reasoning: Enabling candlestick patterns (e.g., engulfing, hammer) adds confirmation to signals, reducing false entries in choppy markets.
Use Volume Filter (useVolumeFilter): True
Reasoning: The volume filter ensures signals occur during high-volume breakouts, which are more likely to sustain in crypto markets.
Signal Arrow Size (signalSize): 2.0
Reasoning: Increasing the arrow size to 2.0 (from 1.5) makes buy/sell signals more visible on the chart, especially on smaller screens or volatile price action.
Background Highlight Transparency (bgTransparency): 85
Reasoning: A slightly higher transparency (85 from 80) keeps the background highlights subtle but visible, avoiding chart clutter.
How to Apply These Parameters
Copy the Script: Use the Pine Script provided in the previous response.
Paste in TradingView: Open TradingView, go to the Pine Editor, paste the code, and click "Add to Chart."
Set Parameters: In the strategy settings, manually input the recommended values above or adjust them via the input fields.
Test on a 5-Minute Chart: Apply the strategy to a liquid crypto pair (e.g., BTC/USDT, ETH/USDT) on a 5-minute chart.
Fine-Tuning for Optimal Performance
To find the absolute best parameters for your specific trading pair and market conditions, use TradingView’s Strategy Tester and optimization features:
Backtesting:
Run the strategy on historical data for your chosen pair (e.g., BTC/USDT on Binance).
Check metrics like Net Profit, Profit Factor, Win Rate, and Max Drawdown in the Strategy Tester.
Focus on a sample period of at least 1–3 months to capture various market conditions (bull, bear, sideways).
Parameter Optimization:
In the Strategy Tester, click the settings gear next to the strategy name.
Enable optimization for key inputs like emaFastLen (test range: 7–12), emaSlowLen (15–25), slPerc (0.5–1.5), and tpPerc (1.0–3.0).
Run the optimization to find the combination with the highest net profit or best Sharpe ratio, but avoid over-optimization (curve-fitting) by testing on out-of-sample data.
Market-Specific Adjustments:
Volatile Pairs (e.g., DOGE/USDT): Use tighter stop losses (e.g., 0.5–0.7%) and smaller take-profit targets (e.g., 1.0–1.2%) to account for rapid price swings.
Stable Pairs (e.g., BTC/USDT): Slightly wider stop losses (e.g., 1.0–1.2%) and take-profit targets (e.g., 1.8–2.5%) may work better.
Trending Markets: Increase emaSlowLen (e.g., to 25–30) to follow stronger trends.
Choppy Markets: Tighten bbMult (e.g., to 1.8) and lower rsiOverbought/rsiOversold (e.g., to 70/30) to filter noise.
Forward Testing:
After backtesting, run the strategy in real-time on a demo account for 1–2 weeks to validate performance under current market conditions.
Important Notes
No Universal "Best" Numbers: Optimal parameters vary by crypto pair, exchange, and market conditions (e.g., bull vs. bear market). The suggested values are a starting point based on common scalping practices.
Risk Management: Never risk more than 1–2% of your account per trade. Adjust position sizing in TradingView’s strategy settings to align with your risk tolerance.
Market Volatility: Crypto markets are highly volatile. Test the strategy on your specific pair and adjust parameters if signals are too frequent or too rare.
Not Financial Advice: This is an educational tool. Backtest thoroughly and use a demo account before trading with real funds.
If you want me to generate a chart showing backtest performance for specific parameters or to tweak the script further (e.g., adding more indicators or adjusting signal logic), let me know!can you add clear buy ans sell signs above the candles in this codeTo add clear buy and sell signals above the candles in the provided Pine Script, I'll modify the existing code to include prominent text labels directly above (for sell signals) and below (for buy signals) the candles. These labels will be larger, color-coded, and positioned to avoid clutter, ensuring they are easily visible on the chart. The core strategy logic (EMA, RSI, MACD, Bollinger Bands, candlestick patterns, and volume filter) will remain unchanged, and I'll reuse the same artifact_id since this is an update to the previous script.AdvancedCryptoScalpingStrategy.pinex-pine
FuTech : Preferential Price📌 First Ever Indicator : FuTech : Preferential Price
💡 What if you could instantly know the Preferential Price — as if the company announced a preferential issue in today’s meeting surprisingly?
Normally, you’d be stuck with tedious valuation spreadsheets and SEBI formula checks 🧮📑…
✨ But not anymore — this tool does the hard work for you!
With just one click, it auto-calculates the Preferential Issue Floor Price under SEBI ICDR Regulations, 2018 - Regulation 164 (as amended), directly from your chart symbol.
✅ How it works ?
📅 Relevant Date = 30 days prior to either:
• Today’s date (default mode)
• Or your chosen EGM date (user input)
📊 For the Relevant Date, the indicator automatically computes:
• VWAP (90 trading days preceding Relevant Date)
• VWAP (10 trading days preceding Relevant Date)
🔎 As per SEBI Reg.164, the higher of these two VWAPs is selected as the Minimum Issue Price (Preferential Price).
💰 Price is neatly formatted in Indian style (e.g. ₹1,00,000).
✅ Key Features:
⚡ Auto-calculates from chart symbol — no manual entry.
🎛️ Option to input EGM date for accurate floor price compliance.
🎨 Fully customizable: text color, size, background, position.
🪄 Clean display → shows only the final Preferential Price (Reg.164).
📌 Usage:
This indicator is built for analysts, fund managers, and corporate professionals dealing with Preferential Allotment pricing compliance.
It ensures quick visibility of the floor price under SEBI ICDR rules, directly on your chart.
⚠️ Disclaimer:
📌 The calculated Preferential Price is an approximation based on SEBI ICDR Reg.164 methodology.
📊 Actual price determined by the company / merchant banker may vary slightly (±5) due to rounding, data source differences, or timing adjustments.
📅 Ensure to verify with official exchange data and SEBI filings before relying on these numbers.
📝 This tool is meant for analytical and educational purposes only, not a substitute for regulatory or professional advice.
SMC Analysis - Fair Value Gaps (Enhanced)SMC Analysis - Fair Value Gaps (Enhanced) Script Summary
Overview
The "SMC Analysis - Fair Value Gaps (Enhanced)" script, written in Pine Script (version 6), is a technical analysis indicator designed for TradingView to identify and visualize Fair Value Gaps (FVGs) on a price chart. It supports both the main timeframe and multiple higher timeframes (MTF) for comprehensive market analysis. FVGs are price gaps formed by a three-candle pattern, indicating potential areas of market inefficiency where price may return to fill the gap.
Key Features
FVG Detection:
Identifies bullish FVGs: Occur when the high of a candle two bars prior is lower than the low of the current candle, with the middle candle being bullish (close > open).
Identifies bearish FVGs: Occur when the low of a candle two bars prior is higher than the high of the current candle, with the middle candle being bearish (close < open).
Visualizes FVGs as colored boxes on the chart (green for bullish, red for bearish).
Mitigation Tracking:
Tracks when FVGs are touched (price overlaps the gap range) or mitigated (price fully closes the gap).
Strict Mode: Marks an FVG as mitigated when price touches the gap range.
Normal Mode: Requires a full breakthrough (price crossing the gap’s bottom for bullish FVGs or top for bearish FVGs) for mitigation.
Optionally converts FVG box borders to dashed lines and increases transparency when partially touched.
Multi-Timeframe (MTF) Support:
Analyzes FVGs on three user-defined higher timeframes (default: 15m, 60m, 240m).
Displays MTF FVGs with distinct labels and slightly more transparent colors.
Ensures no duplicate processing of MTF bars to maintain performance.
Customization Options:
FVG Length: Adjustable duration for how long FVGs are displayed (default: 20 bars).
Show/Hide FVGs: Toggle visibility for main timeframe and each MTF.
Color Customization: User-defined colors for bullish and bearish FVGs (default: green and red).
Display Options: Toggle for showing dashed lines after partial touches and strict mitigation mode.
Performance Optimization:
Limits the number of displayed boxes (50 for main timeframe, 20 per MTF) to prevent performance issues.
Automatically removes older boxes to maintain a clean chart.
Functionality
Visualization: Draws boxes around detected FVGs, with customizable colors and text labels ("FVG" for main timeframe, "FVG " for MTF).
Dynamic Updates: Extends or terminates FVG boxes based on mitigation status and user settings.
Efficient Storage: Uses arrays to manage FVG data (boxes, tops, bottoms, indices, mitigation status, and touch status) separately for main and MTF analyses.
Use Case
This indicator is designed for traders using Smart Money Concepts (SMC) to identify areas of market inefficiency (FVGs) for potential price reversals or continuations. The MTF support allows analysis across different timeframes, aiding in confirming trends or spotting higher-timeframe support/resistance zones.
Optimized ADX DI CCI Strategy### Key Features:
- Combines ADX, DI+/-, CCI, and RSI for signal generation.
- Supports customizable timeframes for indicators.
- Offers multiple exit conditions (Moving Average cross, ADX change, performance-based stop-loss).
- Tracks and displays trade statistics (e.g., win rate, capital growth, profit factor).
- Visualizes trades with labels and optional background coloring.
- Allows countertrading (opening an opposite trade after closing one).
1. **Indicator Calculation**:
- **ADX and DI+/-**: Calculated using the `ta.dmi` function with user-defined lengths for DI and ADX smoothing.
- **CCI**: Computed using the `ta.cci` function with a configurable source (default: `hlc3`) and length.
- **RSI (optional)**: Calculated using the `ta.rsi` function to filter overbought/oversold conditions.
- **Moving Averages**: Used for CCI signal smoothing and trade exits, with support for SMA, EMA, SMMA (RMA), WMA, and VWMA.
2. **Signal Generation**:
- **Buy Signal**: Triggered when DI+ > DI- (or DI+ crosses over DI-), CCI > MA (or CCI crosses over MA), and optional ADX/RSI filters are satisfied.
- **Sell Signal**: Triggered when DI+ < DI- (or DI- crosses over DI+), CCI < MA (or CCI crosses under MA), and optional ADX/RSI filters are satisfied.
3. **Trade Execution**:
- **Entry**: Long or short trades are opened using `strategy.entry` when signals are detected, provided trading is allowed (`allow_long`/`allow_short`) and equity is positive.
- **Exit**: Trades can be closed based on:
- Opposite signal (if no other exit conditions are used).
- MA cross (price crossing below/above the exit MA for long/short trades).
- ADX percentage change exceeding a threshold.
- Performance-based stop-loss (trade loss exceeding a percentage).
- **Countertrading**: If enabled, closing a trade triggers an opposite trade (e.g., closing a long opens a short).
4. **Visualization**:
- Labels are plotted at trade entries/exits (e.g., "BUY," "SELL," arrows).
- Optional background coloring highlights open trades (green for long, red for short).
- A statistics table displays real-time metrics (e.g., capital, win rates).
5. **Trade Tracking**:
- Tracks the number of long/short trades, wins, and overall performance.
- Monitors equity to prevent trading if it falls to zero.
### 2.3 Key Components
- **Indicator Calculations**: Uses `request.security` to fetch indicator data for the specified timeframe.
- **MA Function**: A custom `ma_func` handles different MA types for CCI and exit conditions.
- **Signal Logic**: Combines crossover/under checks with recent bar windows for flexibility.
- **Exit Conditions**: Multiple configurable exit strategies for risk management.
- **Statistics Table**: Updates dynamically with trade and capital metrics.
## 3. Configuration Options
The script provides extensive customization through input parameters, grouped for clarity in the TradingView settings panel. Below is a detailed breakdown of each setting and its impact.
### 3.1 Strategy Settings (Global)
- **Initial Capital**: Default `10000`. Sets the starting capital for backtesting.
- **Effect**: Determines the base equity for calculating position sizes and performance metrics.
- **Default Quantity Type**: `strategy.percent_of_equity` (50% of equity).
- **Effect**: Controls the size of each trade as a percentage of available equity.
- **Pyramiding**: Default `2`. Allows up to 2 simultaneous trades in the same direction.
- **Effect**: Enables multiple entries if conditions are met, increasing exposure.
- **Commission**: 0.2% per trade.
- **Effect**: Simulates trading fees, reducing net profit in backtesting.
- **Margin**: 100% for long and short trades.
- **Effect**: Assumes no leverage; adjust for margin trading simulations.
- **Calc on Every Tick**: `true`.
- **Effect**: Ensures real-time signal updates for precise execution.
### 3.2 Indicator Settings
- **Indicator Timeframe** (`indicator_timeframe`):
- **Options**: `""` (chart timeframe), `1`, `5`, `15`, `30`, `60`, `240`, `D`, `W`.
- **Default**: `""` (uses chart timeframe).
- **Effect**: Determines the timeframe for ADX, DI, CCI, and RSI calculations. A higher timeframe reduces noise but may delay signals.
### 3.3 ADX & DI Settings
- **DI Length** (`adx_di_len`):
- **Default**: `30`.
- **Range**: Minimum `1`.
- **Effect**: Sets the period for calculating DI+ and DI-. Longer periods smooth trends but reduce sensitivity.
- **ADX Smoothing Length** (`adx_smooth_len`):
- **Default**: `14`.
- **Range**: Minimum `1`.
- **Effect**: Smooths the ADX calculation. Longer periods produce smoother ADX values.
- **Use ADX Filter** (`use_adx_filter`):
- **Default**: `false`.
- **Effect**: If `true`, requires ADX to exceed the threshold for signals to be valid, filtering out weak trends.
- **ADX Threshold** (`adx_threshold`):
- **Default**: `25`.
- **Range**: Minimum `0`.
- **Effect**: Sets the minimum ADX value for valid signals when the filter is enabled. Higher values restrict trades to stronger trends.
### 3.4 CCI Settings
- **CCI Length** (`cci_length`):
- **Default**: `20`.
- **Range**: Minimum `1`.
- **Effect**: Sets the period for CCI calculation. Longer periods reduce noise but may lag.
- **CCI Source** (`cci_src`):
- **Default**: `hlc3` (average of high, low, close).
- **Effect**: Defines the price data for CCI. `hlc3` is standard, but users can choose other sources (e.g., `close`).
- **CCI MA Type** (`ma_type`):
- **Options**: `SMA`, `EMA`, `SMMA (RMA)`, `WMA`, `VWMA`.
- **Default**: `SMA`.
- **Effect**: Determines the moving average type for CCI signal smoothing. EMA is more responsive; VWMA weights by volume.
- **CCI MA Length** (`ma_length`):
- **Default**: `14`.
- **Range**: Minimum `1`.
- **Effect**: Sets the period for the CCI MA. Longer periods smooth the MA but may delay signals.
### 3.5 RSI Filter Settings
- **Use RSI Filter** (`use_rsi_filter`):
- **Default**: `false`.
- **Effect**: If `true`, applies RSI-based overbought/oversold filters to signals.
- **RSI Length** (`rsi_length`):
- **Default**: `14`.
- **Range**: Minimum `1`.
- **Effect**: Sets the period for RSI calculation. Longer periods reduce sensitivity.
- **RSI Lower Limit** (`rsi_lower_limit`):
- **Default**: `30`.
- **Range**: `0` to `100`.
- **Effect**: Defines the oversold threshold for buy signals. Lower values allow trades in more extreme conditions.
- **RSI Upper Limit** (`rsi_upper_limit`):
- **Default**: `70`.
- **Range**: `0` to `100`.
- **Effect**: Defines the overbought threshold for sell signals. Higher values allow trades in more extreme conditions.
### 3.6 Signal Settings
- **Cross Window** (`cross_window`):
- **Default**: `0`.
- **Range**: `0` to `5` bars.
- **Effect**: Specifies the lookback period for detecting DI+/- or CCI crosses. `0` requires crosses on the current bar; higher values allow recent crosses, increasing signal frequency.
- **Allow Long Trades** (`allow_long`):
- **Default**: `true`.
- **Effect**: Enables/disables new long trades. If `false`, only closing existing longs is allowed.
- **Allow Short Trades** (`allow_short`):
- **Default**: `true`.
- **Effect**: Enables/disables new short trades. If `false`, only closing existing shorts is allowed.
- **Require DI+/DI- Cross for Buy** (`buy_di_cross`):
- **Default**: `true`.
- **Effect**: If `true`, requires a DI+ crossover DI- for buy signals; if `false`, DI+ > DI- is sufficient.
- **Require CCI Cross for Buy** (`buy_cci_cross`):
- **Default**: `true`.
- **Effect**: If `true`, requires a CCI crossover MA for buy signals; if `false`, CCI > MA is sufficient.
- **Require DI+/DI- Cross for Sell** (`sell_di_cross`):
- **Default**: `true`.
- **Effect**: If `true`, requires a DI- crossover DI+ for sell signals; if `false`, DI+ < DI- is sufficient.
- **Require CCI Cross for Sell** (`sell_cci_cross`):
- **Default**: `true`.
- **Effect**: If `true`, requires a CCI crossunder MA for sell signals; if `false`, CCI < MA is sufficient.
- **Countertrade** (`countertrade`):
- **Default**: `true`.
- **Effect**: If `true`, closing a trade triggers an opposite trade (e.g., close long, open short) if allowed.
- **Color Background for Open Trades** (`color_background`):
- **Default**: `true`.
- **Effect**: If `true`, colors the chart background green for long trades and red for short trades.
### 3.7 Exit Settings
- **Use MA Cross for Exit** (`use_ma_exit`):
- **Default**: `true`.
- **Effect**: If `true`, closes trades when the price crosses the exit MA (below for long, above for short).
- **MA Length for Exit** (`ma_exit_length`):
- **Default**: `20`.
- **Range**: Minimum `1`.
- **Effect**: Sets the period for the exit MA. Longer periods delay exits.
- **MA Type for Exit** (`ma_exit_type`):
- **Options**: `SMA`, `EMA`, `SMMA (RMA)`, `WMA`, `VWMA`.
- **Default**: `SMA`.
- **Effect**: Determines the MA type for exit signals. EMA is more responsive; VWMA weights by volume.
- **Use ADX Change Stop-Loss** (`use_adx_stop`):
- **Default**: `false`.
- **Effect**: If `true`, closes trades when the ADX changes by a specified percentage.
- **ADX % Change for Stop-Loss** (`adx_change_percent`):
- **Default**: `5.0`.
- **Range**: Minimum `0.0`, step `0.1`.
- **Effect**: Specifies the percentage change in ADX (vs. previous bar) that triggers a stop-loss. Higher values reduce premature exits.
- **Use Performance Stop-Loss** (`use_perf_stop`):
- **Default**: `false`.
- **Effect**: If `true`, closes trades when the loss exceeds a percentage threshold.
- **Performance Stop-Loss (%)** (`perf_stop_percent`):
- **Default**: `-10.0`.
- **Range**: `-100.0` to `0.0`, step `0.1`.
- **Effect**: Specifies the loss percentage that triggers a stop-loss. More negative values allow larger losses before exiting.
## 4. Visual and Statistical Output
- **Labels**: Displayed at trade entries/exits with arrows (↑ for buy, ↓ for sell) and text ("BUY," "SELL"). A "No Equity" label appears if equity is zero.
- **Background Coloring**: Optionally colors the chart background (green for long, red for short) to indicate open trades.
- **Statistics Table**: Displayed at the top center of the chart, updated on timeframe changes or trade events. Includes:
- **Capital Metrics**: Initial capital, current capital, capital growth (%).
- **Trade Metrics**: Total trades, long/short trades, win rate, long/short win rates, profit factor.
- **Open Trade Status**: Indicates if a long, short, or no trade is open.
## 5. Alerts
- **Buy Signal Alert**: Triggered when `buy_signal` is true ("Cross Buy Signal").
- **Sell Signal Alert**: Triggered when `sell_signal` is true ("Cross Sell Signal").
- **Usage**: Users can set up TradingView alerts to receive notifications for trade signals.
Price Action [BreakOut] InternalKey Features and Functionality
Support & Resistance (S/R): The script automatically identifies and draws support and resistance lines based on a user-defined "swing period." These lines are drawn from recent pivot points, and users can customize their appearance, including color, line style (solid, dashed, dotted), and extension (left, right, or both). The indicator can also display the exact price of each S/R level.
Trendlines: It draws trendlines connecting pivot highs and pivot lows. This feature helps visualize the current trend direction. Users can choose to show only the newest trendlines, customize their length and style, and select the source for the pivot points (e.g., candle close or high/low shadow).
Price Action Pivots: This is a core component that identifies and labels different types of pivots based on price action: Higher Highs (HH), Lower Highs (LH), Higher Lows (HL), and Lower Lows (LL). These pivots are crucial for understanding market structure and identifying potential trend changes. The script marks these pivots with shapes and can display their price values.
Fractal Breakouts: The script identifies and signals "fractal breakouts" and "breakdowns" when the price closes above a recent high pivot or below a recent low pivot, respectively. These signals are visually represented with up (⬆) and down (⬇) arrow symbols on the chart.
Customization and Alerts: The indicator is highly customizable. You can toggle on/off various features (S/R, trendlines, pivots, etc.), adjust colors, line styles, and text sizes. It also includes an extensive list of alert conditions, allowing traders to receive notifications for:
Price Crossovers: When the close price crosses over or under a support or resistance level.
Trendline Breaks: When the price breaks above an upper trendline or below a lower trendline.
Fractal Breaks: When a fractal breakout or breakdown occurs.






















