N Order EMAThe exponential moving average is one of the most fundamental tools in technical analysis, but its implementation is almost always locked to a single mathematical approach. I've always wanted to extend the EMA into an n-order filter, and after some time working through the digital signal processing mathematics, I finally managed to do it. This indicator takes the familiar EMA concept and opens it up to four different discretization methods, each representing a valid way to transform a continuous-time exponential smoother into a discrete-time recursive filter. On top of that, it includes adjustable filter order, which fundamentally changes the frequency response characteristics in ways that simply changing the period length cannot achieve.
The four discretization styles are impulse-matched, all-pole, matched z-transform, and bilinear (Tustin). The all-pole version is exactly like stacking multiple EMAs together but implemented in a single function with proper coefficient calculation. It uses a canonical form where you get one gain coefficient and the rest are zeros, with the feedback coefficients derived from the binomial expansion of the pole polynomial. The other three methods are attempts at making generalizations of the EMA in different ways. Impulse-matched creates the filter by matching the discrete-time impulse response to what the continuous EMA would produce. Matched z-transform directly maps the continuous poles to the z-domain using the exponential relationship. Bilinear uses the Tustin transformation with frequency prewarping to ensure the cutoff frequency is preserved despite the inherent warping of the mapping.
Honestly, they're all mostly the same in practice, which is exactly what you'd expect since they're all valid discretizations of the same underlying filter. The differences show up in subtle ways during volatile market conditions or in the exact phase characteristics, but for most trading applications the outputs will track each other closely. That said, the bilinear version works particularly well at low periods like 2, where other methods can sometimes produce numerical artifacts. I personally like the z-match for its clean frequency-domain properties, but the real point here is demonstrating that you can tackle the same problem from multiple mathematical angles and end up with slightly different but equally valid implementations.
The order parameter is where things get interesting. A first-order EMA is the standard single-pole recursive filter everyone knows. When you move to second-order, you're essentially cascading two filter sections, which steepens the roll-off in the frequency domain and changes how the filter responds to sudden price movements. Higher orders continue this progression. The all-pole style makes this particularly clear since it's literally stacking EMA operations, but all four discretization methods support arbitrary order. This gives you control over the aggressiveness of the smoothing that goes beyond just adjusting the period length.
On top of the core EMA calculation, I've included all the standard variants that people use for reducing lag. DEMA applies the EMA twice and combines the results to get faster response. TEMA takes it further with three applications. HEMA uses a Hull-style calculation with fractional periods, applying the EMA to the difference between a half-period EMA and a full-period EMA, then smoothing that result with the square root of the period. These are all implemented using whichever discretization method you select, so you're not mixing different mathematical approaches. Everything stays consistent within the chosen framework.
The practical upside of this indicator is flexibility for people building trading systems. If you need a moving average with specific frequency response characteristics, you can tune the order parameter instead of hunting for the right period length. If you want to test whether different discretization methods affect your strategy's performance, you can swap between them without changing any other code. For most users, the impulse-matched style at order 1 will behave almost identically to a standard EMA, which gives you a familiar baseline to work from. From there you can experiment with higher orders or different styles to see if they provide any edge in your particular market or timeframe.
What this really highlights is that even something as seemingly simple as an exponential moving average involves mathematical choices that usually stay hidden. The standard EMA formula you see in textbooks is already a discretized version of a continuous exponential decay, and there are multiple valid ways to perform that discretization. By exposing these options, this indicator lets you explore a parameter space that most traders never even know exists. Whether that exploration leads to better trading results is an empirical question that depends on your strategy and market, but at minimum it's a useful reminder that the tools we take for granted are built on arbitrary but reasonable mathematical decisions.
移動平均線
MACD AI Flux Pro Dashboard V. 2Acknowledgment
This indicator is built upon the MACD-V (Volatility-Normalized MACD) methodology originally created by Alex Spiroglou, CMT, whose research (2015–2022) introduced the principle of normalizing MACD momentum by volatility (MACD/ATR). Full acknowledgment and credit are hereby given to Mr. Spiroglou as the original author of the MACD-V concept and framework.
Indicator Overview — MACD-V Flux Pro Dashboard V.2
The MACD-V Flux Pro Dashboard advances Spiroglou’s volatility-normalized foundation into a comprehensive multi-system architecture that unifies momentum, trend, volatility, and compression analytics in one visual framework. It is engineered for precision decision-making in both intraday and swing-trading environments.
Key Dashboard Features:
Dynamic Probability Engine: Calculates real-time long and short probabilities by weighting momentum, slope, compression, and volume pressure components into a composite score.
Multi-Timeframe Confirmation (HTF Tiles): Displays live directional agreement across fast, mid, and slow timeframes for confidence filtering and signal validation.
Regime Detection System: Automatically classifies the market as Trend Up, Trend Down, Compression, or Transition, applying background color cues for instant context.
Risk and News Filters: Integrates ATR-based risk gating and customizable “mute windows” to block trade signals during high-volatility or scheduled news events.
VWAP and Adaptive Bands: Plots VWAP with configurable ATR or standard-deviation bands to highlight over-extension and pullback zones.
Trend-Day and Opening-Range Logic: Monitors RTH (Regular Trading Hours) price behavior to identify potential trend-day conditions.
Smart Entry Arrows: Generates visual long/short signals only when multiple subsystems confirm direction, slope strength, and proximity to VWAP within defined thresholds.
On-Chart Dashboard Panel: Presents live metrics including probability bias, regime state, ATR level, risk status, and news filters with adaptive color-coding and optional emoji cues for intuitive interpretation.
Chart Display Summary:
All elements are presented directly on the main chart, combining price structure, VWAP bands, EMAs, and regime background shading with the real-time dashboard panel. The design eliminates the need for a secondary pane, offering a consolidated and context-rich view of market dynamics
Elite_Pro SignalsTrial version to get the signals. used various indicators including candle pattern. Works on 5 min candle but checks multi time frames to see if it is inline with 15 min and 1 hr. Best works on Gold and Indices.
Triple EMA strategy by kingtraderthis strategy is purely based on moving everages, ema5, ema50 and ema200, avoid ranging market. in 1 mint your tp should 15-20pips, in 3mint tp should be 25pips, in 5mint tp should not above 50pips, in 15mints make tp 60 to 80 pips, in 30 mints tp 150 and 1h and h4 ur tp above 200pips, when target achieves have partial closing and keep ur trade breakeven. this indicator is for educational purpose only any loss by using this indicator, the author will not be responsible.
Mythical EMAs + Dynamic VWAP BandThis indicator titled "Mythical EMAs + Dynamic VWAP Band." It overlays several volatility-adjusted Exponential Moving Averages (EMAs) on the chart, along with a Volume Weighted Average Price (VWAP) line and a dynamic band around it.
Additionally, it uses background coloring (clouds) to visualize bullish or bearish trends, with intensity modulated by the price's position relative to the VWAP.
The EMAs are themed with mythical names (e.g., Hermes for the 9-period EMA), but this is just stylistic flavoring and doesn't affect functionality.
I'll break it down section by section, explaining what each part does, how it works, and its purpose in the context of technical analysis. This indicator is designed for traders to identify trends, momentum, and price fairness relative to volume-weighted averages, with volatility adjustments to make the EMAs more responsive in volatile markets.
### 1. **Volatility Calculation (ATR)**
```pine
atrLength = 14
volatility = ta.atr(atrLength)
```
- **What it does**: Calculates the Average True Range (ATR) over 14 periods (a common default). ATR measures market volatility by averaging the true range (the greatest of: high-low, |high-previous close|, |low-previous close|).
- **Purpose**: This volatility value is used later to dynamically adjust the EMAs, making them more sensitive in high-volatility conditions (e.g., during market swings) and smoother in low-volatility periods. It helps the indicator adapt to changing market environments rather than using static EMAs.
### 2. **Custom Mythical EMA Function**
```pine
mythical_ema(src, length, base_alpha, vol_factor) =>
alpha = (2 / (length + 1)) * base_alpha * (1 + vol_factor * (volatility / src))
ema = 0.0
ema := na(ema ) ? src : alpha * src + (1 - alpha) * ema
ema
```
- **What it does**: Defines a custom function to compute a modified EMA.
- It starts with the standard EMA smoothing factor formula: `2 / (length + 1)`.
- Multiplies it by a `base_alpha` (a user-defined multiplier to tweak responsiveness).
- Adjusts further for volatility: Adds a term `(1 + vol_factor * (volatility / src))`, where `vol_factor` scales the impact, and `volatility / src` normalizes ATR relative to the source price (making it scale-invariant).
- The EMA is then calculated recursively: If the previous EMA is NA (e.g., at the start), it uses the current source value; otherwise, it weights the current source by `alpha` and the prior EMA by `(1 - alpha)`.
- **Purpose**: This creates "adaptive" EMAs that react faster in volatile markets (higher alpha when volatility is high relative to price) without overreacting in calm periods. It's an enhancement over standard EMAs, which use fixed alphas and can lag in choppy conditions. The mythical theme is just naming—functionally, it's a volatility-weighted EMA.
### 3. **Calculating the EMAs**
```pine
ema9 = mythical_ema(close, 9, 1.2, 0.5) // Hermes - quick & nimble
ema20 = mythical_ema(close, 20, 1.0, 0.3) // Apollo - short-term foresight
ema50 = mythical_ema(close, 50, 0.9, 0.2) // Athena - wise strategist
ema100 = mythical_ema(close, 100, 0.8, 0.1) // Zeus - powerful oversight
ema200 = mythical_ema(close, 200, 0.7, 0.05) // Kronos - long-term patience
```
- **What it does**: Applies the custom EMA function to the close price with varying lengths (9, 20, 50, 100, 200 periods), base alphas (decreasing from 1.2 to 0.7 for longer periods to make shorter ones more responsive), and volatility factors (decreasing from 0.5 to 0.05 to reduce volatility influence on longer-term EMAs).
- **Purpose**: These form a multi-timeframe EMA ribbon:
- Shorter EMAs (e.g., 9 and 20) capture short-term momentum.
- Longer ones (e.g., 200) show long-term trends.
- Crossovers (e.g., short EMA crossing above long EMA) can signal buy/sell opportunities. The volatility adjustment makes them "mythical" by adding dynamism, potentially improving signal quality in real markets.
### 4. **VWAP Calculation**
```pine
vwap_val = ta.vwap(close) // VWAP based on close price
```
- **What it does**: Computes the Volume Weighted Average Price (VWAP) using the built-in `ta.vwap` function, anchored to the close price. VWAP is the average price weighted by volume over the session (resets daily by default in Pine Script).
- **Purpose**: VWAP acts as a benchmark for "fair value." Prices above VWAP suggest bullishness (buyers in control), below indicate bearishness (sellers dominant). It's commonly used by institutional traders to assess entry/exit points.
### 5. **Plotting EMAs and VWAP**
```pine
plot(ema9, color=color.fuchsia, title='EMA 9 (Hermes)')
plot(ema20, color=color.red, title='EMA 20 (Apollo)')
plot(ema50, color=color.orange, title='EMA 50 (Athena)')
plot(ema100, color=color.aqua, title='EMA 100 (Zeus)')
plot(ema200, color=color.blue, title='EMA 200 (Kronos)')
plot(vwap_val, color=color.yellow, linewidth=2, title='VWAP')
```
- **What it does**: Overlays the EMAs and VWAP on the chart with distinct colors and titles for easy identification in TradingView's legend.
- **Purpose**: Visualizes the EMA ribbon and VWAP line. Traders can watch for EMA alignments (e.g., all sloping up for uptrend) or price interactions with VWAP.
### 6. **Dynamic VWAP Band**
```pine
band_pct = 0.005
vwap_upper = vwap_val * (1 + band_pct)
vwap_lower = vwap_val * (1 - band_pct)
p1 = plot(vwap_upper, color=color.new(color.yellow, 0), title="VWAP Upper Band")
p2 = plot(vwap_lower, color=color.new(color.yellow, 0), title="VWAP Lower Band")
fill_color = close >= vwap_val ? color.new(color.green, 80) : color.new(color.red, 80)
fill(p1, p2, color=fill_color, title="Dynamic VWAP Band")
```
- **What it does**: Creates a band ±0.5% around the VWAP.
- Plots the upper/lower bands with full transparency (color opacity 0, so lines are invisible).
- Fills the area between them dynamically: Semi-transparent green (opacity 80) if close ≥ VWAP (bullish bias), red if below (bearish bias).
- **Purpose**: Highlights deviations from VWAP visually. The color change provides an at-a-glance sentiment indicator—green for "above fair value" (potential strength), red for "below" (potential weakness). The narrow band (0.5%) focuses on short-term fairness, and the fill makes it easier to spot than just the line.
### 7. **Trend Clouds with VWAP Interaction**
```pine
bullish = ema9 > ema20 and ema20 > ema50
bearish = ema9 < ema20 and ema20 < ema50
bullish_above_vwap = bullish and close > vwap_val
bullish_below_vwap = bullish and close <= vwap_val
bearish_below_vwap = bearish and close < vwap_val
bearish_above_vwap = bearish and close >= vwap_val
bgcolor(bullish_above_vwap ? color.new(color.green, 50) : na, title="Bullish Above VWAP")
bgcolor(bullish_below_vwap ? color.new(color.green, 80) : na, title="Bullish Below VWAP")
bgcolor(bearish_below_vwap ? color.new(color.red, 50) : na, title="Bearish Below VWAP")
bgcolor(bearish_above_vwap ? color.new(color.red, 80) : na, title="Bearish Above VWAP")
```
- **What it does**: Defines trend conditions based on EMA alignments:
- Bullish: Shorter EMAs stacked above longer ones (9 > 20 > 50, indicating upward momentum).
- Bearish: The opposite (downward momentum).
- Sub-conditions combine with VWAP: E.g., bullish_above_vwap is true only if bullish and price > VWAP.
- Applies background colors (bgcolor) to the entire chart pane:
- Strong bullish (above VWAP): Green with opacity 50 (less transparent, more intense).
- Weak bullish (below VWAP): Green with opacity 80 (more transparent, less intense).
- Strong bearish (below VWAP): Red with opacity 50.
- Weak bearish (above VWAP): Red with opacity 80.
- If no condition matches, no color (na).
- **Purpose**: Creates "clouds" for trend visualization, enhanced by VWAP context. This helps traders confirm trends—e.g., a strong bullish cloud (darker green) suggests a high-conviction uptrend when price is above VWAP. The varying opacity differentiates signal strength: Darker for aligned conditions (trend + VWAP agreement), lighter for misaligned (potential weakening or reversal).
### Overall Indicator Usage and Limitations
- **How to use it**: Add this to a TradingView chart (e.g., stocks, crypto, forex). Look for EMA crossovers, price bouncing off EMAs/VWAP, or cloud color changes as signals. Bullish clouds with price above VWAP might signal buys; bearish below for sells.
- **Strengths**: Combines momentum (EMAs), volume (VWAP), and volatility adaptation for a multi-layered view. Dynamic colors make it intuitive.
- **Limitations**:
- EMAs lag in ranging markets; volatility adjustment helps but doesn't eliminate whipsaws.
- VWAP resets daily (standard behavior), so it's best for intraday/session trading.
- No alerts or inputs for customization (e.g., changeable lengths)—it's hardcoded.
- Performance depends on the asset/timeframe; backtest before using.
- **License**: Mozilla Public License 2.0, so it's open-source and modifiable.
O5 EMA Cloud 20/50 + Pullback Touch Alerts (Bull/Bear Filter)This indicator shows an EMA cloud that is set to Fast=20 and Slow=50 by default, but can be changed.
It features suggested entry signals when price pulls back to either EMA level in both uptrends and downtrends.
Buy signals print only when price pulls back to one of the EMA levels and closes up.
Bearish signals only print when price pulls back to one of the EMA levels and closes down.
Aktien Spike Detector by DavidDescription:
This indicator marks the daily high and low on the chart and provides a visual and audible alert whenever the current price touches either of these levels. Additionally, the indicator highlights the candlestick that reaches the daily high or low to quickly identify significant market movements or potential reversal points.
Features:
📈 Daily high and low are automatically calculated and displayed as lines on the chart.
🔔 Alert notification when the price touches the daily high or low.
🕯️ Highlighting of the touch candlestick (e.g., color-coded) for better visual orientation.
💡 Ideal for traders trading breakouts, rejections, or intraday reversals.
Areas of application:
Perfect for day traders, scalpers, and intraday analysts who want to see precisely when the market reaches key daily levels.
ES VWAP Overlay for SPX VWAP indicator for SPX. Since SPX does not have volume (index) it's using /es to mimic SPX volume. I find it good for day trading
[boitl] Trendfilter🧭 Trend Filter – Curve View (1D / 1H + M15 Check)
A multi-timeframe trend filter that blends daily, hourly, and 15-minute data into a smooth, color-coded curve displayed in a separate panel.
It visualizes both trend direction and strength while accounting for overextension, providing a reliable “context indicator” for entries and filters.
🔍 Concept
The indicator evaluates three timeframes:
1D (Daily) → SMA200 for long-term trend bias
1H (Hourly) → EMA50 for medium-term confirmation
15M (Intraday) → EMA20 + ATR to detect overextension or mean reversion zones
It computes a continuous trend score between −1 and +1:
+1 → Strong bullish alignment (D1 & H1 both up)
−1 → Strong bearish alignment (D1 & H1 both down)
≈ 0 → Neutral, conflicting, or overextended conditions
The score is smoothed and normalized for a clean visual curve —
green for bullish, red for bearish, with dynamic transparency based on strength.
⚙️ Logic Overview
Timeframe Indicator Purpose
1D SMA200 Long-term trend direction
1H EMA50 Medium-term confirmation
15M EMA20 + ATR Overextension control
Alignment between D1 and H1 defines clear trend bias
Conflicts between them reduce the trend score
M15 overextension (price far from EMA20) softens the signal further
The result is a responsive trend-strength oscillator, ideal for multi-timeframe setups.
🧩 Use Cases
As a trend filter for strategies (e.g. allow entries only if score > 0.3 or < −0.3)
As a visual confirmation of higher-timeframe direction
To avoid trades during conflict or exhaustion
💡 Visualization
Single curve (area plot):
Green = bullish bias
Red = bearish bias
Transparency increases with weaker trend
Background colors:
🟠 Orange → D1/H1 conflict
🔴 Light red → M15 overextension active
Optional: binary alignment line (+1 / 0 / −1) for simplified display
⚙️ Parameters
Proximity to EMA20 (M15) = X×ATR → defines “near” condition
Overextension threshold = X×ATR → sets exhaustion boundary
EMA smoothing → reduces noise for a smoother score
Toggle overextension impact on/off
EMA 3 Lines✅ JP
1つのインジケーター枠内に3本のEMA(短期・中期・長期)を表示します。
初期設定では 8(青)/50(赤)/200(緑)の期間が適用されます。
設定画面から期間・ラインカラー・太さを自由にカスタマイズできます。
✅ EN
This indicator displays three EMAs (short-term, mid-term, and long-term) within a single indicator window.
By default, the EMA periods are set to 8 (blue), 50 (red), and 200 (green).
You can freely customize the EMA lengths, line colors, and line thickness from the settings panel.
Quadruple AlphaTrendKivancOzbilgi's 'Alpha Trend' indicator has been developed as 'Quadruple Alpha Trend'.
It has been extended to AlphaTrend1,2,3,4, and each line allows users to freely choose colors.
Each of the AT1 to 2 and AT3 to 4 was again color-transformed at the crossing point, respectively.
We believe that the value of AT can compensate a lot for all the shortcomings of a regular moving average.
It can show the support and resistance of the low and high points at each horizontal section and
pressed neck point at the same time
Draw a horizontal line type.
These advantages make it easy to visually break through and collapse support and resistance on the monthly, weekly, and daily charts
It makes it possible to distinguish. I think it's an excellent indicator design by Kivanc Ozbilgi.
The most similar indicator to this one is the "UT BOT", which is close to the moving average in terms of support and resistance
Because it gives a euphemism, the value of "Alpha Trend" as an index that includes horizontal support and resistance
Very highly appreciated. If you have any issues or need to develop further, please leave a note.
2 Bandas de Bollinguer (10-20) + 4 EMA + 2 SMA 2 BB (10-20) + 4 EMA (35-50-100-200) + 2 SMA (75-100) configurable
SMA乖離率This script plots the percentage distance between the current price and a Simple Moving Average (SMA) as a line in a separate sub-window (not on the main chart).
It helps you see whether price is over-extended (overbought/oversold) relative to its SMA.
Daily Close Cross Above SMA 20 (Low)Daily closing price crosses above SMA 20 low, signals a bullish trend.
MACD-V Adaptive FluxProMACD-V Adaptive FluxPro
Type: Multi-Factor Volatility-Normalized Momentum & Regime Framework
Overlay: ✅ Yes (on price chart)
Purpose: Detect high-probability trend continuation or reversal zones through volatility-adjusted momentum, VWAP structure, and adaptive filters.
🧩 Concept Overview
MACD-V Adaptive FluxPro is a next-generation, multi-factor analytical framework that merges the principles of Linda Raschke’s 3-10-16 MACD with modern volatility normalization and adaptive filtering.
Instead of generating raw buy/sell signals, it builds a probability-driven environment model — showing when price action, volatility, and structure align for high-confidence trades.
The “V” in MACD-V stands for Volatility Normalization: every MACD component is divided by ATR to stabilize amplitude across fast or slow markets.
This enables the indicator to remain consistent across timeframes, instruments, and volatility regimes.
⚙️ Core Components
1️⃣ Volatility-Normalized MACD (MACD-V)
A traditional MACD built on Linda Raschke’s 3-10-16 structure, but adjusted by ATR to create a volatility-invariant momentum profile.
You can toggle to alternative presets (Scalp / Swing / Trend) for faster or slower environments.
2️⃣ Dynamic Regime Detection
A slope-based classifier that identifies whether the market is:
Trend Up 🟢
Trend Down 🔴
Compression / Squeeze 🟧
Transition / Neutral ⚫
The background color updates dynamically as momentum, volatility, and slope shift between these states.
3️⃣ VWAP Structure Bands
Adaptive VWAP with inner and outer ATR-scaled envelopes.
These act as short-term mean-reversion and breakout zones.
The indicator can optionally gate entries to occur only within defined VWAP proximity.
4️⃣ EMAs for Micro-Trend Confirmation
Includes 9-EMA and 21-EMA, color-configurable for visual crossovers and short-term momentum bias.
5️⃣ Multi-Timeframe Confirmation Tiles
Top-center dashboard tiles display directional bias from higher timeframes (e.g., 15m / 1h / 4h).
When all align, it confirms multi-frame trend coherence.
6️⃣ Adaptive Probability Engine
All subsystems — MACD-V, slope, compression, volume z-score, and VWAP distance — feed into a logistic scoring model that outputs a real-time AOI Probability (0-100%).
When conditions align, probabilities rise above 60% (long bias) or drop below 40% (short bias).
These are your high-probability “Areas of Interest.”
7️⃣ Dashboard HUD
The top-right status console provides a one-glance view of system state:
Field Meaning
AOI Prob Long Real-time probability of bullish bias
Regime Market state (Trend, Transition, Compression)
Risk Gate ATR-based volatility filter
News Mute Manual toggle for event-risk suppression
ATR (≈ risk) Real-time volatility readout
Status ✅ Trading OK / 🧱 Risk Gate / 🔇 News Mute / 🟧 Compression
🎯 Interpretation Guide
Visual Meaning
🟢 Green background Confirmed uptrend regime
🔴 Red background Confirmed downtrend regime
🟧 Orange background Volatility compression (squeeze forming)
⚫ Gray background Transitional / indecisive structure
Teal % (AOI Prob Long) Bullish probability > 60%
Arrows Optional: appear only when all gates align (rare, filtered signals)
🧮 Mathematical Notes
MACD-V = (EMA_fast(src) − EMA_slow(src)) / ATR(n)
Normalized score is smoothed, scaled 0–100 via logistic curve
Slope = Δ(EMA(src, n)) / ATR(n)
Probabilities gated by:
Minimum slope magnitude (minAbsSlope)
VWAP proximity (maxVWAPDistATR)
Multi-TF agreement
Cooldown interval (cooldownBars)
ATR-based risk gate
No repainting — all calculations use barstate.isconfirmed.
⚡ Use Cases
✅ Identify trend regime changes before major expansions
✅ Filter breakout vs. compression setups
✅ Quantify volatility conditions before entries
✅ Confirm multi-timeframe alignment
✅ Serve as a visual regime map for automated systems or discretionary traders
🧠 Recommended Presets
Market Type Setting Preset Behavior
Index Futures (ES/NQ) LBR 3-10-16 SMA (default) Classic swing/momentum balance
Scalping (1m–5m) Fast Adaptive Higher frequency, shorter cooldown
Swing Trading (1h–4h) Smooth ATR Broader, trend-only signals
Trend-Following Futures Wide ATR Bands Filters noise, favors strong continuation
⚠️ Notes
Non-repainting, bar-confirmed calculations
Signal arrows are optional and rare — intended for precision setups
ATR and slope thresholds should be tuned per instrument
Compatible with all TradingView markets and resolutions
🏁 Summary
“MACD-V Adaptive FluxPro” is not a simple MACD — it’s a volatility-normalized market state engine that adapts to changing conditions.
It fuses Linda Raschke’s timeless MACD logic with modern volatility, slope, and multi-timeframe analytics — giving you a live market dashboard that tells you when not to trade just as clearly as when you should.
Moyennes Mobiles Pertinentes ema21vert ma50 bleue ma200 rougeUtilisez sur un même script un indicateur avec plusieurs moyennes mobiles servant de supports
Bullish EMA Crossover Exact v6This indicator highlights bullish momentum shifts by plotting 9 EMA and 20 EMA crossovers. When the faster 9 EMA crosses above the slower 20 EMA, a bold black “X” appears exactly at the crossover price, signaling potential buy opportunities. Ideal for identifying strong uptrends and precise bullish entry points with clear visual confirmation.
Custom MTF EMA CloudsVisualize market structure and trend alignment across multiple timeframes with six layered EMA clouds — from short-term momentum to macro trend anchors.
Each pair of EMAs forms a dynamic cloud that adapts to your selected timeframe.
Colors, lengths, and visibility are fully customizable, allowing you to tailor the setup for any trading style.
⚙️ Default Configuration
EMA Short Long Purpose
1 8 13 🔸 Intraday momentum cloud (scalping layer)
2 21 24 🟩 Short-term trend confirmation
3 50 55 🔵 Medium-term swing structure
4 120 144 🔴 Long-term support/resistance band
5 200 238 🟠 Institutional trend foundation
6 400 460 🟣 Macro directional anchor
🧩 Features
✅ Up to 6 independent EMA clouds
✅ Fully customizable short & long lengths
✅ Individual line and cloud colors
✅ Toggle each layer on/off
✅ Works with any timeframe via the Resolution input
✅ Automatic cloud transparency for better chart clarity
📈 How to Use
Use EMA 1–2 (8/13, 21/24) for momentum shifts and intraday entries.
Use EMA 3–4 (50/55, 120/144) for swing confirmation and trend continuation.
Use EMA 5–6 (200/238, 400/460) as long-term anchors to stay aligned with institutional flow.
Watch for crossovers or price breaking in/out of clouds — they often precede strong directional moves.






















