Ehlers Optimal Tracking FilterThe original script was posted on ProRealCode by user Nicolas.
Dr. R.E. Kalman introduced his concept of optimum estimation in 1960. Since that time, his technique has proven to be a powerful and practical tool. The approach is particularly well suited for optimizing the performance of modern terrestrial and space navigation systems. Many traders not directly involved in system analysis have heard about Kalman filtering and have expressed an interest in learning more about it for market applications. Although attempts have been made to provide simple, intuitive explanations, none has been completely successful. Almost without exception, descriptions have become mired in the jargon and state-space notation of the “cult”.
Surprisingly, in spite of the obscure-looking mathematics (the most impenetrable of which can be found in Dr. Kalman’s original paper), Kalman filtering is a fairly direct and simple concept. In the spirit of being pragmatic, we will not deal with the full-blown matrix equations in this description and we will be less than rigorous in the application to trading. Rigorous application requires knowledge of the probability distributions of the statistics. Nonetheless we end with practically useful results. We will depart from the classical approach by working backwards from Exponential Moving Averages. In this process, we introduce a way to create a nearly zero lag moving average. From there, we will use the concept of a Tracking Index that optimizes the filter tracking for the given uncertainty in price movement and the uncertainty in our ability to measure it.
Credits to: www.prorealcode.com
스크립트에서 "N+credit最新动态"에 대해 찾기
Waddah Attar Explosion by ShizaruThe original script was posted on ProRealCode by user Nicolas.
The Waddah Attar explosion indicator is a well known indi in the forex community all over the web. It measures the price volatility "explosion" with the help of a difference between upper and lower bollinger bands (also known as "squeeze") and its direction and with a slow MACD advance or decline weighted with a coefficient (sensitivity=150).
A "deadzone" of x pips/points is at 20 points by default, but should be adjusted to the traded instrument.
If green or red oscillator histogram breach the "Explosion Line" above the dead zone, it's a signal.
This indicator act pretty much as a scalper in lower timeframe, but I found it useful with different timeframe comparison in higher ones in the past (M30/H1/H4).
Credits to www.prorealcode.com
Butterworth Filter by ShizaruThe original script was posted on ProRealCode by user StefanoCG.
Butterworth Filter (called also "maximally flat") is one of the simplest electronic filter. Its purpose is to obtain a frequency response of the flat as possible in the passband. Applied to the retail price index aims to filter out the "noise" and give you an indication on the direction of the more readable price.
Credits to: www.prorealcode.com
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
Cowabunga V2 Alert TriggerRefer to forums.babypips.com
This is the converison from mql4 files, credits goes to original poster.
Cowabunga V2 Alert TriggerRefer to forums.babypips.com
This is the translation from mql4 files, credits goes to original poster
HullMA StrategyA Hull Moving Average strategy. I simply copied the code from mohamed982 and wrapped it in strategy code. All credits go to him not me.
Smoothed Balance of PowerSmoothed BOP to try and find dark pool activity. Only works in charts with working volume!
Credits go to LazyBear for some coding on the plotting and Igor Livshin for the formula.
UCS Squeeze BarThis indicator is a request from tvmember jackvmk. Credits to jackvmk.
Squeeze bar = a bar which encompasses 5, 10, 15, 20, 30, 40 SMA
Squeeze bars high and lows are support and resistance. when price break one of them, this direction is direction of explosion.
I have added a further more customization
1. Using EMA instead of SMA
2. Using Heikin Ashi Optimization
3. Using Realbody (ignore wicks)
4. Plot the MA Ribbon
[Bitcoin] Spot price vs Futures indicatorA handy script to detect opportunities in the futures market during extreme movement.
During rallies, futures usually tend to be US$10 above spot price, on the other hand it can be $1 below spot price when the price starts to decline.
You could also draw a trendline to it :) measuring the amount of risk people are willing to take just to predict future prices in the rally/decline.
Credits to lowstrife for the idea, I'm just implementing it :)
Buy/Sell Pressure Raw// This is a port of the bar by bar Buy/Sell pressure indicator by Karthik Marar.
// See below link for further details.
// karthikmarar.blogspot.com
// The only difference being I used the Hull moving average instead of WMA which the HullMA is a derivative of.
// Credits to Chris Moody for the HullMA code.
// All disclaimers apply
MAC-Z Indicator [LazyBear]This indicator is a composite of MACD and Z-Score (requested by @ChartAt). The general idea is that counter-trend component of the Z-score is used to adjust/improve the trend component of the MACD. The advantage is that it is a more accurate and “assumption-free” and can more accurately describe how a market or stock actually works in a given time frame.
I have also added support to smooth out the MAC-Z using Laguerre filter (Thanks @TheLark for the excellent LMA). Note that smoothing removes the "noise" component additive of Z-Score, so you may miss some good signals. By default Laguerre smoothing is OFF, I suggest playing with the Gamma to see if you can find a proper trade-off value.
Theme credits --> @liw0
More info:
cssanalytics.wordpress.com
CVD Divergences (cdikici71 x tncylyv)CVD Divergence
Summary
This indicator brings the powerful and creative divergence detection logic from @cdikici71's popular "cd_RSI_Divergence_Cx" script to the world of volume analysis.
While RSI is a fantastic momentum tool, I personally choose to rely on volume as a primary source of truth. This script was born from the desire to see how true buying and selling pressure—measured by Cumulative Volume Delta (CVD)—diverges from price action. It takes the brilliant engine built by @cdikici71 and applies it to CVD, offering a unique look into market conviction.
What is Cumulative Volume Delta (CVD)?
CVD is a running total of volume that transacted at the ask price (buying) minus volume that transacted at the bid price (selling). In simple terms, it shows whether buyers or sellers have been more aggressive over a period. A rising CVD suggests net buying pressure, while a falling CVD suggests net selling pressure.
Core Features
• Divergence Engine by @cdikici71: The script uses the exact same two powerful methods for finding divergences as the original RSI version:
o Alignment with HTF Sweep: The default, cleaner method for finding high-probability divergences.
o All: A more sensitive method that finds all possible divergences.
• Anchored CVD Periods: You can choose to reset the CVD calculation on a Daily, Weekly, or Monthly basis to analyze buying and selling pressure within specific periods. Or, you can leave it on Continuous to see the all-time flow.
• Automatic Higher Timeframe (HTF) Alignment: To remove the guesswork, the "Auto-Align HTF" option will automatically select a logical higher timeframe for divergence analysis based on your current chart (e.g., 15m chart uses 4H for divergence, 1H chart uses 1D, etc.). You can also turn this off for full manual control.
• Fully Customizable Information Table: An on-screen table keeps you updated on the divergence status. You can easily adjust its Position and Size in the settings to fit your chart layout.
• Built-in Alerts: Alerts are configured for both Bullish and Bearish divergences to notify you as soon as they occur.
How to Use This Indicator
The principle is the same as any divergence strategy, but with the conviction of volume behind it.
• 🔴 Bearish Divergence: Price makes a Higher High, but the CVD makes a Lower High or an equal high. This suggests that the buying pressure is weakening and may not be strong enough to support the new price high.
• 🟢 Bullish Divergence: Price makes a Lower Low, but the CVD makes a Higher Low or an equal low. This suggests that selling pressure is exhausting and the market may be ready for a reversal.
Always use divergence signals as a confluence with your own analysis, support/resistance levels, and market structure.
Huge Thanks and Credit
This script would not exist without the brilliant and creative work of @cdikici71. The entire divergence detection engine, the visualization style, and the core logic are based on his original masterpiece, "cd_RSI_Divergence_Cx". I have simply adapted his framework to a different data source.
If you find this indicator useful, please go and show your support for his original work!
________________________________________
Disclaimer: This is a tool for analysis, not a financial advice signal service. Please use it responsibly as part of a complete trading strategy.
JDB MA Breakout IndicatorAll credit goes to JDB_Trading . Follow on X.
This indicator visualises one of his strategies.
1. Detecting the dominant moving average.
2. Price is supposed to be at least 70 candles below it for buy signals/40 above for sells.
3. detects break on dominant MA + BB 20,2.
4. Used on W & M timeframes.
5. alerts possible.
ARO Pro — Adaptive Regime OscillatorARO Pro — Adaptive Regime Oscillator (v6)
ARO Pro turns your chart into a context-aware decision system. It classifies every bar as Trending (up or down) or Ranging in real time, then switches its math to match the regime: trend strength is measured with an ATR-normalized EMA spread, while range behavior is tracked with a center-based RSI oscillator. The result is cleaner entries, fewer false signals, and faster reads on regime shifts—without repainting.
⸻
How it works (under the hood)
1. Regime Detection (Kaufman ER):
ARO computes Kaufman’s Efficiency Ratio (ER) over a user-defined length.
- ER > threshold → Trending (direction from EMA fast vs. EMA slow)
- ER ≤ threshold → Ranging
2. Adaptive Oscillator Core:
- Trend mode: (EMA(fast) − EMA(slow)) / ATR * 100 → momentum normalized by volatility.
- Range mode: RSI(length) − 50 → mean-reversion pressure around zero.
3. Volatility Filter (optional):
Blocks signals if ATR as % of price is below a floor you set. This reduces noise in thin or quiet markets.
4. MTF Trend Filter (optional & non-repainting):
Confirms signals only if a higher timeframe EMA(fast) > EMA(slow) for longs (or < for shorts). Implemented with lookahead_off and gaps_on.
5. Confirmation & Alerts:
Signals are locked only on bar close (barstate.isconfirmed) and offered via three alert types: ARO Long, ARO Short, ARO Regime Shift.
⸻
What you see on the chart
• Background heat:
• Green = Trending Up, Red = Trending Down, Gray = Range.
• ARO line (panel): Adaptive oscillator (trend/value colors).
• Signal markers: ▲ Long / ▼ Short on confirmed bars.
• Guide lines: Upper/Lower thresholds (±K) and zero line.
• Info Panel (table): Regime, ER, ATR %, ARO, HTF status (OK/BLOCK/OFF), and a Confidence light.
• Debug Overlay (optional): Quick view of thresholds and raw conditions for tuning.
⸻
Inputs (quick reference)
• Signals: Fast/Slow EMA, RSI length, ER length & threshold, oscillator smoothing, signal threshold.
• Filters: ATR length, minimum ATR% (volatility floor), toggle for volatility filter.
• Visuals: Background on/off, Info Panel on/off, Debug overlay on/off.
• MTF (safe): Toggle + HTF timeframe (e.g., 240, D, W).
⸻
Interpreting signals
• Long: Trend regime AND fast EMA > slow EMA AND ARO ≥ +threshold (confirmed bar, filters passing).
• Short: Trend regime AND fast EMA < slow EMA AND ARO ≤ −threshold (confirmed bar, filters passing).
• Regime Shift: Alert when ER moves the market from Range → Trend or flips trend direction.
⸻
Practical use cases & examples
1) Intraday momentum alignment (scalps to day trades)
• Timeframes: 5–15m with HTF filter = 4H.
• Flow:
1. Wait for Trend Up background + HTF OK.
2. Enter on ▲ Long when ARO crosses above +threshold.
3. Stops: 1–1.5× ATR(14) below trigger bar or below last micro swing.
4. Exits: Partial at 1× ATR, trail remainder with an ATR stop or when ARO reverts to zero/Regime Shift.
• Why it works: You’re trading with the dominant higher-timeframe structure while avoiding low-volatility fakeouts.
2) Swing trend following (cleaner trend legs)
• Timeframes: 1H–4H with HTF filter = 1D.
• Flow:
1. Only act in Trend background aligned with HTF.
2. Add on subsequent ▲ signals as ARO maintains positive (or negative) territory.
3. Reduce or exit on Regime Shift (Trend → Range or direction flip) or when ARO crosses back through zero.
• Stops/targets: Initial 1.5–2× ATR; move to breakeven once the trade gains 1× ATR; trail with a multiple-ATR or structure lows/highs.
3) Range tactics (fade the extremes)
• Timeframes: 15m–1H or 1D on mean-reverting names.
• Flow:
1. Act only when background = Range.
2. Fade moves when ARO swings from ±extremes back toward zero near well-defined S/R.
3. Exit at the opposite band or zero line; abort if a Regime Shift to Trend occurs.
• Tip: Increase ER threshold (e.g., 0.35–0.40) to label more bars as Range on choppy instruments.
4) Event days & macro filters
• Approach: Raise the volatility floor (Min ATR%) on macro days (FOMC, CPI).
• Effect: You’ll ignore “fake” micro swings in the minutes leading up to releases and catch only post-event confirmed momentum.
⸻
Parameter tuning guide
• ER Threshold:
• Lower (0.20–0.30) = more Trend bars, more signals, higher noise.
• Higher (0.35–0.45) = stricter trend confirmation, fewer but cleaner signals.
• Signal Threshold (±K):
• Raise to reduce whipsaws; lower for earlier but noisier triggers.
• Volatility Floor (ATR%):
• Thin/quiet assets benefit from a higher floor (e.g., 0.3–0.6).
• Highly liquid futures/forex can work with lower floors.
• HTF Filter:
• Keep it ON when you want higher win consistency; turn OFF for tactical counter-trend plays.
⸻
Alerts (recommended setup)
• “ARO Long” / “ARO Short”: Entry-style alerts on confirmed signals.
• “ARO Regime Shift”: Context alert to scale in/out or switch playbooks (trend vs. range).
All alerts are non-repainting and fire only when the bar closes.
⸻
Best practices & combinations
• Price action & S/R: Use ARO to define when to engage, and price structure to define where (breakout levels, pullback zones).
• VWAP/Session tools: In intraday trends, ▲ signals above VWAP tend to carry; avoid shorts below session VWAP in strong downtrends.
• Risk first: Size by ATR; never let a single ARO event override your max risk per trade.
• Portfolio filter: On indices/ETFs, enable HTF filter and a stricter ER threshold to ride regime legs.
⸻
Non-repaint and implementation notes
• The script does not repaint:
• Signals are computed and locked on bar close (barstate.isconfirmed).
• All higher-timeframe data uses request.security(..., lookahead_off, gaps_on).
• No future indexing or negative offsets are used.
• The Info Panel and Debug overlay are purely visual aids and do not change signal logic.
⸻
Limitations & tips
• Chop sensitivity: In hyper-choppy symbols, consider raising ER threshold and the signal threshold, and enable HTF filter.
• Instrument personality: EMAs/RSI lengths and volatility floor often need a quick 2–3 minute tune per asset class (FX vs. crypto vs. equities).
• No guarantees: ARO improves context and timing, but it is not a promise of profitability—always combine with risk management.
⸻
Quick start (TL;DR)
1. Timeframes: 5–15m intraday (HTF = 4H); 1H–4H swing (HTF = 1D).
2. Use defaults, then tune ER threshold (0.25–0.40) and Signal threshold (±20).
3. Enable Volatility Floor (e.g., 0.2–0.5 ATR%) on quiet assets.
4. Trade ▲ / ▼ only in matching Trend background; fade extremes only in Range background.
5. Set alerts for Long, Short, and Regime Shift; manage risk with ATR stops.
⸻
Author’s note: ARO Pro is designed to be clear, adaptive, and operational out of the box. If you publish variants (e.g., different ER logic, alternative trend cores), please credit the original and document any changes so users can compare behavior reliably.
Trinity Multi-Timeframe MA TrendOriginal script can be found here: {Multi-Timeframe Trend Analysis } www.tradingview.com
1. all credit the original author www.tradingview.com
2. why change this script:
- added full transparency function to each EMA
- changed to up and down arrows
- change the dashboard to be able to resize and reposition
How to Use This Indicator
This indicator, "Trinity Multi-Timeframe MA Trend," is designed for TradingView and helps visualize Exponential Moving Average (EMA) trends across multiple timeframes. It plots EMAs on your chart, fills areas between them with directional colors (up or down), shows crossover/crossunder labels, and displays a dashboard table summarizing EMA directions (bullish ↑ or bearish ↓) for selected timeframes. It's useful for multi-timeframe analysis in trading strategies, like confirming trends before entries.
Configure Settings (via the Gear Icon on the Indicator Title):
Timeframes Group: Set up to 5 custom timeframes (e.g., "5" for 5 minutes, "60" for 1 hour). These determine the multi-timeframe analysis in the dashboard. Defaults: 5m, 15m, 1h, 4h, 5h.
EMA Group: Adjust the lengths of the 5 EMAs (defaults: 5, 10, 20, 50, 200). These are the moving averages plotted on the chart.
Colors (Inline "c"): Choose uptrend color (default: lime/green) and downtrend color (default: purple). These apply to plots, fills, labels, and dashboard cells.
Transparencies Group: Set transparency levels (0-100) for each EMA's plot and fill (0 = opaque, 100 = fully transparent). Defaults decrease from EMA1 (80) to EMA5 (0) for a gradient effect.
Dashboard Settings Group (newly added):
Dashboard Position: Select where the table appears (Top Right, Top Left, Bottom Right, Bottom Left).
Dashboard Size: Choose text size (Tiny, Small, Normal, Large, Huge) to scale the table for better visibility on crowded charts.
Understanding the Visuals:
EMA Plots: Five colored lines on the chart (EMA1 shortest, EMA5 longest). Color changes based on direction: uptrend (your selected up color) if rising, downtrend (down color) if falling.
Fills Between EMAs: Shaded areas between consecutive EMAs, colored and transparent based on the faster EMA's direction and your transparency settings.
Crossover Labels: Arrow labels (↑ for crossover/uptrend start, ↓ for crossunder/downtrend start) appear on the chart at EMA direction changes, with tooltips like "EMA1".
Dashboard Table (top-right by default):
Rows: EMA1 to EMA5 (with lengths shown).
Columns: Selected timeframes (converted to readable format, e.g., "5m", "1h").
Cells: ↑ (bullish/up) or ↓ (bearish/down) arrows, colored green/lime or purple based on trend, with fading transparency for visual hierarchy.
Use this to quickly check alignment across timeframes (e.g., all ↑ in multiple TFs might signal a strong uptrend).
Trading Tips:
Trend Confirmation: Look for alignment where most EMAs in higher timeframes are ↑ (bullish) or ↓ (bearish).
Entries/Exits: Use crossovers on the chart EMAs as signals, confirmed by the dashboard (e.g., enter long if lower TF EMA crosses up and higher TFs are aligned).
Customization: On lower timeframe charts, set dashboard timeframes to higher ones for top-down analysis. Adjust transparencies to avoid chart clutter.
Limitations: This is a trend-following tool; combine with volume, support/resistance, or other indicators. Backtest on historical data before live use.
Performance: Works best on trending markets; may whipsaw in sideways conditions.
IV Rank (tasty-style) — VIXFix / HV ProxyIV Rank (tasty-style) — VIXFix / HV Proxy
Overview
This indicator replicates tastytrade’s IV Rank calculation—but built entirely inside TradingView.
Because TradingView does not expose live option-chain implied volatility, the script lets you choose between two widely used price-based IV proxies:
VIXFix (Williams VIX Fix): a fast-reacting volatility estimate derived from price extremes.
HV(30): 30-day annualized historical volatility of daily log returns.
The goal is to approximate the “rich vs. cheap” option volatility environment that traders use to decide whether to sell or buy premium.
Formula
IV Rank answers the question: Where is current implied volatility relative to its own 1-year range?
𝐼
𝑉
𝑅
=
𝐼
𝑉
𝑐
𝑢
𝑟
𝑟
𝑒
𝑛
𝑡
−
𝐼
𝑉
1
𝑦
𝐿
𝑜
𝑤
𝐼
𝑉
1
𝑦
𝐻
𝑖
𝑔
ℎ
−
𝐼
𝑉
1
𝑦
𝐿
𝑜
𝑤
×
100
IVR=
IV
1yHigh
−IV
1yLow
IV
current
−IV
1yLow
×100
IVcurrent: Current value of the chosen IV proxy.
IV1yHigh/Low: Highest and lowest proxy values over the user-defined lookback (default 252 trading days ≈ 1 year).
IVR = 0 → Current IV equals its 1-year low
IVR = 100 → Current IV equals its 1-year high
IVR ≈ 50 → Current IV sits mid-range
How to Use
High IV Rank (≥50–60%)
Options are relatively expensive → short-premium strategies (credit spreads, iron condors, straddles) may be more attractive.
Low IV Rank (≤20%)
Options are relatively cheap → long-premium strategies (debit spreads, calendars, diagonals) may offer better risk/reward.
Combine with your own analysis, liquidity checks, and risk management.
Inputs & Customization
IV Source: Choose “VIXFix” or “HV(30)” as the volatility proxy.
IVR Lookback: Rolling window for 1-year high/low (default 252 trading days).
VIXFix Parameters: Length and stdev multiplier to fine-tune sensitivity.
Info Label: Optional on-chart label displays current IV proxy, 1-year high/low, and IV Rank.
Alerts: Optional alerts when IVR crosses 50, falls below 20, or rises above 80.
Notes & Limitations
This indicator does not pull real option-chain IV.
It provides a close structural analogue to tastytrade’s IV Rank using price-derived proxies for markets where options data is not directly available.
For live option IV, use broker platforms or third-party data feeds alongside this script.
Tags: IV Rank, Implied Volatility, Tastytrade, VIXFix, Historical Volatility, Options, Premium Selling, Debit Spreads, Market Volatility
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. 🙏
DaDaSto Current / Previous D, W, M High/Low
This script plots the current and previous Month/Week/Day High and Low. It allows for custom color and label inputs.
The original script credit to @The-Hunter
Ark FCI OscillatorFinancial Conditions Index Oscillator
This indicator tracks week-over-week changes in the National Financial Conditions Index (NFCI), providing a dynamic view of evolving financial conditions in the United States.
Overview
The National Financial Conditions Index (NFCI) is a comprehensive weekly composite index published by the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago. It measures financial conditions across U.S. money markets, debt and equity markets, and the traditional and shadow banking systems.
Interpretation
Positive values indicate improving financial conditions
Negative values signal deteriorating financial conditions
Risk assets demonstrate particular sensitivity to changes in financial conditions, making this oscillator valuable for market timing and risk assessment.
Alternative Data Source
Users can modify the source to FRED:NFCIRISK to focus specifically on risk dynamics. The NFCIRISK subindex isolates volatility and funding risk measures within the financial sector, capturing market volatility indicators and liquidity shortage probabilities while excluding broader credit and leverage conditions.
Swing Highs/Lows & Candle Patterns[LuxAlgo] [Filtered]Swing Highs/Lows & Candle Patterns - Tweaked Version
This indicator is a customized and enhanced version of LuxAlgo’s original Swing Highs/Lows & Candle Patterns indicator. It identifies and labels critical swing high and swing low points to help visualize market structure, alongside detecting key reversal candlestick patterns such as Hammer, Inverted Hammer, Bullish Engulfing, Hanging Man, Shooting Star, and Bearish Engulfing.
With added options to selectively display only Lower Highs (LH) and Higher Lows (HL), this tweaked version offers greater flexibility for traders focusing on specific market dynamics. Users can also customize the lookback length and label styling to fit their preferences.
Credit to LuxAlgo for the original concept and foundation of this powerful tool, which this script builds upon to support more tailored technical analysis. Ideal for swing traders and technical analysts seeking improved entry and exit signals through a combination of price swings and candlestick pattern recognition.
How to avoid repainting when using security() - viewing optionsHow to avoid repainting when using the security() - Edited PineCoders FAQ with more viewing options
This may be of value to a limited few, but I've introduced a set of Boolean inputs to PineCoders' original script because viewing all the various security lines at once was giving me a brain cramp. I wanted to study each behavior one-by-one. This version (also updated to PineScript v6) will allow users to selectively display each, or any combination, of the security plots. Each plot was updated to include a condition tied to its corresponding input, ensuring it only appears when explicitly enabled. The label-rendering logic only displays when its related plot is active; however, I've also added an input that allows you to remove all labels, enabling you to see the price action more clearly (the labels can sometimes obscure what you want to see). Run this script in replay mode to view the nuanced differences between the 12 methods while selecting/deselecting the desired plots (selecting all at once can be overcrowded and confusing).
All thanks and credit to PineCoders--these changes I made only provide more control over what’s shown on the chart without altering the core structure or intent of the original script. It helped me, so I thought I should share it. If I inadvertently messed something up, please let me know, and I will try to fix it.
I set the defaults for viewing monthly security functions on the daily timeframe. Only the first 2 security functions plot with the default settings, so change the settings as needed. Be sure to read the original notes and detailed explanations in the PineCoders posting "How to avoid repainting when using security() - PineCoders FAQ."
Bottom line, you should use one of the two functions: f_secureSecurity or f_security, depending on what you are trying to do. Hopefully, this script will make it a little easier for the visual learner to understand why (use replay mode or watch live price action on a lower timeframe).