Support Resistance - DynamicThis is Dynamic Support / Resistance script.
How it Works?
It finds Pivot Points and creates channels for each Pivot Point. Channel size is calculated by (Highest - Lowest) * %Channel_size in Loopback Period. After creating channels it calculates that how many Pivot Points in the channels. more Pivot Points in channel means stronger Support/Resistance. in the option menu there is S/R Strength, this is the minimum number of Pivot Points that each channel must contain to be S/R. calculation starts from last pivot point and go back for "loopback period" which is 300 by default. so last Pivot Points have more priority. Finally after calculating Support/Resistance it draws lines.
Number of Support/Resistance line is Dynamic and up to 20 lines, that means number of lines changes dynamically. you can see how the script puts Suppport/Resistance lines dynamically by "Replay" button. (if I have time I will try to put a video)
Currently the scripts checks up to 40 pivot points in loopback period. it shows up to 20 S/Rs only for visible area in the chart.
There is option to Show S/R lines as Solid, Dotted or Dashed.
Enjoy!
在腳本中搜尋"泰国一寺庙被曝藏有40多具尸体"
Never Buy rules Whatever may be the market cap .... doesn't matter
if you are planning to buy a script, please check 200 day avg, MACD and RSI levels
1. Never buy a stock trading below the 200-day Moving Average
2. Never Buy a stock with MACD below 0
3. Never buy stock with an RSI below 40
Script is written in simple terms, easy to understand and modify.
Zahorchak MeasureCreator: Michael G. Zahorchak.
References:
The Art of Low Risk Investing by Michael G. Zahorchak, 1977. Unfortunately, it's all but impossible to find a copy these days.
The Complete Guide to Market Breadth Indicators by Gregory L. Morris, 2006. A fantastic resource for those interested in Technical Analysis or creating their own trend based system.
Two articles by Greg Morris on the Zahorchak Measure. I can't link to them under the House Rules, but they are easily searchable.
The Zahorchak Measure (ZM) is designed to give you a market bias (either uptrend or downtrend) which you can use to determine a trade bias for ETF's or stocks.
ZM works by taking multiple moving averages of the NYSE Composite, a moving average of the NYSE advance decline line, and examining the relationship between those elements. Broadly, the market is considered to be in a uptrend when ZM is above zero, and a downtrend when below. However, there are many ways to interpret the indicator.
The version created by Greg Morris is more akin to a binary indicator in that ZM jumps from number to number. This version is smoothed to create an oscillator as it reduces whipsaws (at the expense of lag). You can set the EMA Length to 1 to go back to the original.
Some notes:
Michael Zahorchak called it the "Zahorchak Method", whereas Greg Morris uses the term "Measure". I'm not totally clear on the change, but Mr. Morris made some changes (covered below), so that may explain the altered name.
The original indicator used moving averages of 5, 15, and 40 weeks. I have converted these to daily numbers as that's the time frame I most commonly trade. You can convert the numbers back by dividing by 5.
The original indicator used the Dow Industrials for the moving averages, however Greg Morris switched to the NYSE Composite due to the advance decline line being based on the NYSE.
Greg Morris removed the 5 period moving average of the NYSE Composite, as it created increased volatility at market tops and bottoms. I tested ZM with the 5 period MA added back in, and I believe removing it creates a superior indicator.
I've added both Multi Time Frame functionality, and the ability to alter moving average lengths. Play around and see what you can come up with.
ZM oscillates between -10 and +10. There are some interesting levels creating between these two numbers (apart from the obvious zero level) - see what you can come up with.
All credit goes to Michael Zahorchak and Greg Morris for the indicator creation. I have simply reproduced their work for the TradingView community as this great indicator wasn't available.
Any queries let me know in the comments or PM me.
DD.
Volume Scale by Price (VSP)Volume Scale by Price (VSP) show volume of bar in y-axis (price-axis) with options below:
1. Number of histogram
* Number of histogram = 0 => do not plot volume histogram
* Number of histogram = 1 => plot volume of 21 lasted bar (bar to bar )
* Number of histogram = 2 => plot volume of 21 bar next histogram 1 (bar to bar )
2. Line width
* Columns width of histogram
3. Volume scale ratio
* Scaling histogram with justifiable ratio depend on time frame and symbol
4. Histogram color
* Color of histogram
BO - Bar M15 Signal* This script show the signal base on volatility of previous bar M15 to trade Binary Option.
* Rule of Signal is below:
A. Rule 1: Wait for prices created temporary peak and bottom
Row 18: 10 minutes till close
B. Rule 2: Reversal previous bar's direction
1. Put Signal - Row 22 - 25:
- Delay 5' after bar M15 open
- previous bar's direction is upward
- price less than previous close
- temporary bottom greater than previous open
2. Call Signal - Row 29 - 32:
- Delay 5' after bar M15 open
- previous bar's direction is downward
- price greater than previous close
- temporary peak less than previous open
C. Rule 3: Follow previous bar's direction
1. Put Signal - Row 37 - 40:
- Delay 5' after bar M15 open
- previous bar's direction is downward
- price greater than previous open
- temporary peak less than previous peak
2. Call Signal - Row 43 - 46:
- Delay 5' after bar M15 open
- previous bar's direction is upward
- price less than previous open
- temporary bottom greater than previous bottom
Data structure map[string, float]The script shows a workaround for map in pine-script via drawings.
There are few restrictions with them:
1. The size of the map cannot be more that amount of allowed drawings (about 40 by now)
2. Because the map shares the space of drawings throughout the whole script, using drawings with the map must be careful, with handly creating and removing of each drawing, because otherwise pine's garbage collector might break the stack. I'd recommend not using more drawings with the map.
3. setters and getters must be called on every bar, because of implementation of functions in pine there are inner serieses, which must be updated on every bar. So wherever you have a setter or getter in the code - it must be called on every bar. But if it's just an update, then you should pass 'false' as a param of the funtion.
The script shows a way to work with the map: filling it with some tickers and values for each of it and then plot the value if the symbol on the chart equals to one of the tickers in the map.
And there are some examples of updating of the value and removing of the item from the map.
Data structure ListThe script shows a workaround for list in pine-script via drawings.
There are few restrictions with them:
1. The size of the list cannot be more that amount of allowed drawings (about 40 by now)
2. Because the list shares the space of drawings throughout the whole script, using drawings with the list must be careful, with handly creating and removing of each drawing, because otherwise pine's garbage collector might break the list
3. Setters and Getters must be called on every bar, because of implementation of functions in pine there are inner serieses, which must be updated on every bar. So wherever you have a setter or getter in the code - it must be called on every bar. But if it's just an update, then you should pass 'false' as a param of the funtion.
And an example of using the list - reversing of the list. When the list have been created, it's filled on every bar and then gets reversed. Plots show result before and after reversing of the list.
There are also some pieces of commented code showing possible way of working with another funtions of the list.
Data Structure StackThe script shows a workaround for stack in pine-script via drawings.
There are few restrictions with them:
1. The depth of the stack cannot be more that amount of allowed drawings (about 40 by now)
2. Because the stack shares the space of drawings throughout the whole script, using drawings with the stack must be careful, with handly creating and removing of each drawing, because otherwise pine's garbage collector might break the stack
3. push() and pop() must be called on every bar, because of implementation of functions in pine there are inner serieses, which must be updated on every bar. So wherever you have a setter or getter in the code - it must be called on every bar. But if it's just an update, then you should pass 'false' as a param of the funtion.
And the example of using the stack: if the stack is empty - then fill it and taking by a value per bar till the stack is emty and then fill it again.
Insertion sort and binary searchThe script shows a workaround for arrays in pine-script via drawings.
There are few restrictions with them:
1. The length of the array cannot be more that amount of allowed drawings (about 40 by now)
2. Because the "array" shares the space of drawings throughout the whole script, using drawings with the "array" must be careful, with handly creating and removing of each drawing, because otherwise pine's garbage collector might break the "array"
3. Getter and Setter must be called on every bar, because of implementation of functions in pine there are inner serieses, which must be updated on every bar. So wherever you have a setter or getter in the code - it must be called on every bar. But if it's just an update, then you should pass 'false' as a param of the funtion.
The script also shows an example of implementation of Insertion sort of the array in pine: when the array have been created, it's filled with pseudo-random numbers and sorted on every bar. There are plotting of the array's numbers before/after soring to show the sorting result.
There's also an example of implementation of binary search: after generation elements of the array, the first element is kept in local variable and after sorting of the array, the scripts is looking for new element's position via binary search and then plot that new index in an array (last plotted value with the green color)
Workaround for Arrays in pine and Bubble sortThe script shows a workaround for arrays in pine-script via drawings.
There are few restrictions with them:
1. The length of the array cannot be more that amount of allowed drawings (about 40 by now)
2. Because the "array" shares the space of drawings throughout the whole script, using drawings with the "array" must be careful, with handly creating and removing of each drawing, because otherwise pine's garbage collector might break the "array"
3. Getter and Setter must be called on every bar, because of implementation of functions in pine there are inner serieses, which must be updated on every bar. So wherever you have a setter or getter in the code - it must be called on every bar. But if it's just an update, then you should pass 'false' as a param of the funtion.
The script also shows an example of implementation of bubble sort of the array in pine: when the array have been created, it's filled with pseudo-random numbers and sorted on every bar. There are plotting of the array's numbers before/after soring to show the sorting result.
Trading Range Indicator - TRISimple script made to identify trading ranges in any timeframe
The oscillator bounces between 1 and 0. 1 means that the current asset is in a trading range and 0 meaning it is not.
The determination of a trading range is determined by the following:
ATR(14)40 and RSI<60
ADX<25
Due to all 3 having to be fulfilled in order for the oscillator to show there is a trading range, this causes a problem where 2 of the conditions are fulfilled and therefore still shows 0 on the oscillator, however, the asset could very well be in a trading range.
So what in the world do you use this for if there is such a significant margin of error?
Since all 3 conditions need to be fulfilled in order for it to be considered a trading range, this gives a very strong indicator of said trading ranges. So if a person is looking at individual stock tickers or the SPY index ticker, then when the oscillator reads a 1, it could be ideal to open an Iron Condor on said ticker. This means that this indicator is not well suiting for traditional long and short stock positions, but rather it is made for options traders who by using an Iron Condor can make money of a range-bound market.
Ultimate EMA ScreenerHello traders
Very busy preparing a few stuff for Black Friday but wanted to remind that I still know Pinescript and how to step up my game :)
My master @RicardoSantos once again showed me how to push the pinescript limits one step/dimension further. Kudo also to my client (Judy) for this amazing idea.
I inspired myself from his script () to display multiple assets in the same panel - without breaking the chart scaling.
In that case, I'm comparing 5 EMAs relatively to each other and display:
- a square if they're stacked properly
- a triangle if two of them are stacked properly
- a dash otherwise
For those interested, the conditions are in the f_securitys function.
I posted in the past a few screeners using labels but we're limited to 50 labels per script. There isn't such limitation when using the plotshape function - giving us more complete screeners. #uhuuuu
I'll post a few more examples this week with different trading strategies/combinations. The possibilities here are (close to) limitless.
I'm using the security built-in function to call external assets (here different forex pairs) and we're limited to 40 security calls per script.
But nothing preventing us from duplicating the same script a few times and calling different assets each time :) If you'd like to display 10 forex pairs, you only need to add that script on your chart twice and select 5 pairs for the first panel, 5 other pairs for the second panel.
You're welcome <3
All the BEST
Dave
ANN MACD BTC v2.0 This script is the 2nd version of the BTC Deep Learning (ANN) system.
Created with the following indicators and tools:
RSI
MACD
MOM
Bollinger Bands
Guppy Exponential Moving Averages:
(3,5,8,10,12,15,30,35,40,45,50,60)
Note: I was inspired by the CM Guppy Ema script.
Thank you very much to dear wroclai for his great help.
He has been a big help in the deep learning series.
That's why the licenses in this series are for both of us.
I'm sharing these series and thats the first. Stay tuned and regards!
Note : Alerts added.
Modified Stochastic MACD Oscillator - Vitali ApirineFor all MACD enthusiasts out there, hot off the press, I present this next generation "Modified Stochastic MACD Oscillator" employing PSv4.0, originally formulated by Vitali Apirine for TASC - November 2019 Traders Tips. Just when you may have thought it was the end of the evolutionary line for MACD technology, it's not! Basically it's a NEW hybridization of a MACD and stochastic rolled into one, maintaining scale symmetry to support overbought/oversold defined levels across time frames and assets, unlike the ordinary MACD. On the ordinary MACD, this is virtually impossible to do properly, and trust me, I have tried with zero success. My less than 40 line implementation, at initial release, is a heavily modified version of the original indicator using novel techniques, surpassing not only Apirine's original intended design, but also the "contemporary MACD" provided by TV, visible on the bottom of the chart.
Utilizing the "Power of Pine", I included the maximum amount of features I could surmise in an ultra small yet powerful package. I provided an abundance of control over each feature as an attempt to create another heavenly MACD experience in an open source package, only rivaled by my "Ultimate MACD Super Pack". Configurations are displayed above in multiple scenarios that should be suitable for most traders. Of notable mention, I rescaled the oscillator more towards a zero mean unity scale, while still leaving the waveforms completely intact.
Features List Includes:
Dark Background - Easily disabled in indicator Settings->Style for "Light" charts or with Pine commenting
AND much, much more... you have the source!
For those of you who are new to Pine Script, this script also may help you understand advanced programming techniques in Pine and how they may be utilized in a most effective manner. I would like to see Tradingview become the go to platform for the best MACD indicators attainable with this contribution to the TV community. This is commonly what my dense intricate code looks like behind the veil, and if you are wondering why there is no notes, that's because the notation is in the variable naming. If you wish to contribute additional ideas, please do so below in the comments about all things MACD in Pine.
NOTICE: Copy pasting bandits who may be having nefarious thoughts, DO NOT attempt this, because this may violate Tradingview's terms, conditions and/or house rules. "WE" are always watching the TV community vigilantly for mischievous behaviors and actions that exploit well intended authors for the purpose of unscrupulously increasing brownie points in reputation scores. Hiding behind a "protected" wall may not protect you from investigation and account penalization by TV staff. Be respectful, and don't just throw a meaningless feature in there branding it as "your" gizmo. Fair enough? Alrighty then... I firmly believe in "innovating" future state-of-the-art indicators, and please contact me if you wish to do so.
The comments section below is solely just for commenting and other remarks, ideas, compliments, etc... regarding only this indicator, not others. When available time provides itself, I will consider your inquiries, thoughts, and concepts presented below in the comments section if you do have any questions or comments regarding this indicator. When my indicators achieve more prevalent use by TV members, I may implement more ideas when they present themselves as worthy additions. As always, "Like" it if you simply just like it with a proper thumbs up, and also return to my scripts list occasionally for additional postings. Have a profitable future everyone!
Iconik Trading Suite: Auto Support/Resistance - WeeklyAutogeneration of support and resistance lines. Posts a horizontal line of the open/close for the past 40 weekly candles.
DM for a PowerPoint describing this indicator and the rest of Iconik in detail.
Iconik Trading Suite Indicator List:
ITS-OSC: Oscillators (v2)
ITS-PAA: Price Action Alerts (v2)
ITS-ASR: Auto Support/Resistance
-> Daily (v2)
-> 3 Day (v2)
-> Weekly (v2)
ITS-4TFC: 4 Time Frame Confirmation (v1)
ITS-DIV: Divergence Seeker (v1)
Iconik Trading Suite: Auto Support/Resistance - 3 DayAutogeneration of support and resistance lines. Posts a horizontal line of the open/close for the past 40 3 Day candles.
DM for a PowerPoint describing this indicator and the rest of Iconik in detail.
Iconik Trading Suite Indicator List:
ITS-OSC: Oscillators (v2)
ITS-PAA: Price Action Alerts (v2)
ITS-ASR: Auto Support/Resistance
-> Daily (v2)
-> 3 Day (v2)
-> Weekly (v2)
ITS-4TFC: 4 Time Frame Confirmation (v1)
ITS-DIV: Divergence Seeker (v1)
Iconik Trading Suite: Auto Support/Resistance - DailyAutogeneration of support and resistance lines. Posts a horizontal line of the open/close for the past 40 daily candles.
DM for a PowerPoint describing this indicator and the rest of Iconik in detail.
Iconik Trading Suite Indicator List:
ITS-OSC: Oscillators (v2)
ITS-PAA: Price Action Alerts (v2)
ITS-ASR: Auto Support/Resistance
-> Daily (v2)
-> 3 Day (v2)
-> Weekly (v2)
ITS-4TFC: 4 Time Frame Confirmation (v1)
ITS-DIV: Divergence Seeker (v1)
RSI Divergence - Baby WhaleHey guys!
BabyWhale here!
I will open source my scripts, so everyone can use them and update.
In this RSI Divergence script I added Hidden Divergence (beta) as well.
This script will show you:
Bullish Divergence (green triangle)
Hidden Bullish Divergence (green circle)
Bearish Divergence (red triangle)
Hidden Bearish Divergence (red circle)
You can set the RSI values.
I recommend 60 / 40 or 70 / 30.
Last but not least, you can set alarms when a Divergence or Hidden Divergence is found.
Feedback is always welcome!
Credits to @Libertus, I used his script as inspiration.
Good luck with trading!
BabyWhale
Visual RSI [LucF]Visual RSI offers a different way of looking at RSI by providing a composite representation of 9 different RSI-generated components. Instead of focusing on one line only, this approach blends multiple sources to provide the viewer with a larger context RSI-based picture.
For those who don’t want to read
• Green in bullish (>50) zone is the most bullish.
• Red in bullish zone doesn’t necessarily mean bearish—it just means bullish strength is weakening. It may be just a pause before a reprise or exhaustion signalling a reversal—impossible to tell.
• The same in inverse applies to the bearish zone (<50).
For those who want to understand
The nine components making up Visual RSI are:
• a current timeframe RSI
• a higher timeframe RSI
• the delta between these two RSI lines
• for each of these three basic components, two independent Bollinger band: one calculated for the bullish section of the scale (>50) and a separate one calculated for the lower bearish region.
Dual BBs
In my view, RSI’s position with regards to the centerline is much more important than its position in extreme areas. Why? Because the building block of RSI is the ratio of the averages of up/down moves during the RSI period. When the average of ups is greater, RSI is > 50. So while a rising signal starting from 20 let’s say, indicates that the rate of change is increasing, only when it crosses 50 can we say that sentiment balance has truly become bullish, and this information is more reliable than the signal being at a level corresponding to whatever estimate we make of what constitutes an extreme value. In my landscape, the general balance of a ratio provides more valuable information than the ratio’s exact value.
The idea behind the dual BBs is to provide independent tracking information for both halves of the indicator’s space, which I find more useful than the normal method of simply adding a multiple of the standard deviation on both sides of the mean. With dual BBs, the upper BB will never go lower than the indicator’s centerline, and the lower BB will never go higher. The upper BB focuses on upper-bound volatility when the signal is bearish, and the lower BB focuses on downside volatility when the signal is bearish.
The functions used to calculate the independent BBs are reusable on other signals if a centerline can be defined for them. A clamping percentage is implemented, so that when a BB line is hugging the centerline it clamps to it. This helps in providing earlier signals when they use the BB line states.
Providing context to RSI
What RSI measures indirectly is the balance in the rate of change—or the speed of price movement, but not its instant value, otherwise RSI would be even noisier. More precisely, RSI represents the relative strength of the up/down movement in the last n bars of RSI’s length, with 14 often used because that’s what Wilder proposed (Visual RSI’s defaults are 20 for the current timeframe and 40 for the higher timeframe). At every bar, a new value is added to the equation and an old value carrying equal weight is dropped, so a large dropped off value will have more impact on RSI’s value if the new bar’s move is small. This accounts for some of RSI’s speed in identifying exhaustion after important moves, but almost for some of its noise.
Visual RSI is the result of trying to drown RSI’s noise in the context of other informational streams, while simultaneously providing even faster information than RSI alone, by giving more visual weight to the delta between the current and higher timeframe RSI’s.
How to read Visual RSI
The default settings show all 9 basic components as green/red areas of intensities varying with their importance. The most intense colors are reserved for the delta RSI and the BBs have the lightest intensities. The individual lines of components are intentionally difficult to distinguish so that focus is first on the general picture, including the all-important six-state background, and then on the delta RSI.
One entry setup could be reversals in a larger trend context, so low pivots of the delta in a fully bullish context (a green background in the upper section of the indicator), and inversely, high pivots in a fully bearish context (a red background in the lower section of the indicator).
Please resist the common misconception, when interpreting RSI, that a reversal in the signal will necessarily lead to a reversal in price. Each trend has its rhythm. Only machine-generated price action can progress regularly. It’s normal for trends to take a breather for some time before they continue or reverse, as traders driving the trend experience emotional fatigue and gradual fear. RSI reversals merely signify that such a breather has occurred—nothing more. Only the larger context can provide information that can situate that pause and put more meaningful odds on it having more probability of continuing in one direction or the other. This is the reasoning behind the setup just described.
Features
• All components can be hidden, displayed as a simple line, a uniformly colored fill, or a green/red fill (the default).
• The background can be colored using 9 different methods, including 3 six-state methods using the rising/falling BB lines of the 3 basic components. These six states allow for bullish/bearish/neutral sentiment in both the upper and lower regions of the indicator. A bearish (dark red) background in the bullish (>50) section of the indicator represents decreasing bullishness. A bearish (slightly brighter red) in the bearish (<50) section of the indicator means incresingly bearish sentiment. The six-state backgrounds allow for neutral (no color) sentiment when no compelling signs can be found to conclude anything with meaningful odds. The default background uses the six-state method on the higher timeframe RSI’s BBs because I find it the most useful, as it represents the largest—and slowest—context sentiment among all the indicator’s components.
• A thin status bar in the top part of the indicator also allows selection of the same 9 methods to color it. The default is a triple-state system using the rising/falling characteristics of the current timeframe RSI’s BBs to provide a short-term counterbalance to the long-term background.
• Three different markers can be configured using approximately 70 permutations each, each filtered by 20 different filter permutations. When modification of the relevant parameters in the script’s Settings/Settings/Parameters section is added, possibilities are almost endless. If the generated signals are then fed into the PineCoders Engine and combined with the Engine’s own options, the permutations go up another order of magnitude, and changes to any setting can be instantly evaluated using the Engine’s backtesting results.
• Five simple filters can be combined. They are additive. They include volume-related conditions and a chandelier, which I find useful because both volume and volatility (the chandelier using highs/lows and ATR) are sensible complementary sources to RSI’s momentum information. The filter’s state can be shown as a thin line at the bottom of the indicator.
• Alerts can be configured using any of the marker/filter combinations mentioned. As usual, once your markers/filters are set up the way you want, create your alert from the chart/timeframe you want the alert to run on and be sure to use the “Once Per Bar Close” triggering condition. Use an alert message that will remind you of which combination of markers were used when creating the alert.
• A plot providing entry signals for the PineCoders Backtesting & Trading Engine is supplied. It will use whichever marker/filter configuration is active to generate signals.
• All higher timeframe information is non-repainting. Higher timeframe lines can be smoothed (the default). The selection of the higher timeframe can be made using 3 different methods:
1. By steps (if current timeframe <= 1 minute: 60 min, <= 60 min: 1D, <= 6H: 3D, <= 1D: 1W, <=1W: 1M, >1W: 12M)
2. By a user-defined multiple of the current timeframe
3. Using a fixed timeframe
Thanks to:
• Alex Orekhov aka @everget for the chandelier code.
• @RicardoSantos who through a small remark early on, unknowingly put me on the track of eliminating noise through visual crowding.
• The brilliant guys in the PineCoders Pro room for your knowledge, limitless creativity and constant companionship.
Volumen Consolidado por DIVISAS contra BITCOIN #09/2019Volumen Consolidado de Bitcoin clasificado por divisas. Gracias a este indicador se podrá obtener la dominancia y participación en el mercado de las diferentes divisas o contratos. Actualmente el indicador incluye un aproximado de 40 pares de BTC contra diferentes divisas, en las cuales resaltan:
*USD
*USDT
*USDC
*XBT
*CNY
*KRW
*GBP
*EUR
Este indicador es un criterio utilizado para un indicador que estaré subiendo en proximamente, el cuál sí contará con el volumen total expresado en un solo panel. Es decir, este indicador, solo especifica una parte del indicador general, que será el volumen consolidado total, que este expresará la cantidad total de bitcoins negociados a nivel mundial. El USD es la moneda con la que el "Market Maker", respalda sus fondos para operar el mercado, cosa que sabemos, por lo tanto otras divisas serían solo un metodo de compra para el retailer(cosa que me motivó a la creación del indicador ya que se podría conocer el sentimiento y reacción de los mismos en lo que ocurre en el mercado).
Recordemos que el principal problema de los análisis que toman en cuenta el precio y volumen en bitcoin es que tradingview te da a conocer solo el "volumen del exchange", por lo tanto no obtienes una cifra exacta de los bitcoins comprados y/o vendidos en todos los sitios en los que se negocia, lo que dificulta tener una percepción objetiva de lo que sucede en el mercado, ya que te guiarías por el volumen que te da el exchange dónde operas y no el que es real.
Sin nada más que decir, espero que tome en cuenta este recurso para sus análisis, que será esencial para aquellos que operan con precio y volumen.
Si quiere realizar alguna colaboración y/o donación por mí obra, será muy bien bienvenida y agradecida:
BTC: 1TqvNSQs39pr2mLeDo3swcrkYvkK1YQAN
LTC: LKYYkJQHBvnEaJSatp53pg8C7iKp9Jp45B
ETH: 0x6e0902a16a0a0d6379cd8600c455a7ab335278cc
rainbow emaHi guys,
This is a multiple EMA script. Editing is free for use if you swap ema to sma as a base setting.
You can use several ema lines by adding one indicator only, and I put 7,14,21,28,40,60,120,200,300 as a threshold which I frequently use.
It is made as an open source at any time possible, so that you are free for playing with it.
Cheers,
JB
rainbow ema갤럭시님 이평선 토대로 JB가 에디트한 지수이평선 모음입니다. 편집하시면 일반 이평선으로도 사용이 가능합니다.
하나의 지표 추가 만으로 여러개의 지수이평선을 사용하실 수 있고, 제가 자주 사용하는 7,14,21,28,40,60,120,200,300선 넣어 놨습니다.
에디트 언제든 가능하시게 오픈소스로 구성되어있으니, 즐겨찾기 넣어 두시고 매매하실때 유용하게 사용하시면 됩니다.