- Overview Consecutive counting is a simple method to mechanically define trending states to the upside and downside. Consecutive counts are calculated by taking reference price level (e.g. close 4 candles ago) and count closes above/below it up to a maximum count that resets the consecutive count back to 1. This tool provides the means to backtest each count by...
FEATURES: - Detect a 2 or 3 consecutive candlestick pattern. Input the value into the first input value. - Choose the minimum and the maximum amount of pips of the candle that you want to detect. The indicator will detect candles within that pips range and highlight the consecutive pattern - Choose to not use the pips threshold. If disabled the indicator will...
Counts consecutive Lower Highs and Higher Lows; number resets to zero when previous pivot high or low gets swept -To help give an idea of when a retracement / run-on-stops may be overdue. i.e. the higher the counter number grows, the longer we've gone without a proper retracement. //inputs// ~pivot lookback/lookforward: increase this for more significant pivot...
Consecutive positive/negative candles Shows the consecutive negative or positive candles
█ OVERVIEW This is a simple script that will plot labels over or under candles to show where there had been consecutive candles that closed in a similar fashion. This script was inspired by a Tweet about Bitcoin experiencing its first 7th-consecutive weekly black candle and I sought out to test that. █ INPUTS There are three inputs for this script....
OVERVIEW Identify price thrusts made up of at least three consecutive bars that conform to specific criteria. (E.g., consecutive higher closes) Depending on the context, these powerful thrusts can indicate emerging momentum or exhaustion. This indicator helps to mark these thrusts for further analysis. CONCEPTS As mentioned, these consecutive bar thrusts...
xGhozt Candle Count simply counts consecutive positive or negative candles, and allows you to get the live statistics of how many times this consecutive candle series occurred in the past, with the probabilities of the next candle to be a reversal, and the average past gains from that reversal. You can select the number of consecutive candles you're tracking, and...
Removing irregular variations in the closing price remain a major task in technical analysis, indicators used to this end mostly include moving averages and other kind of low-pass filters. Understanding what kind of variations we want to remove is important, irregular (noisy) variations have mostly a short term period, fully removing them can be complicated if the...
Very simple strategy based on consecutive candle count. Simple but can be very profitable if you know how to execute. Example: - Buy when consecutive up closes exceeds 3 - Sell when consecutive down closes exceeds 3 For a buy signal, if price closes higher within 5 candles, it is defined as a win. For a sell signal, if price closes lower within 5 candles, it...
Custom strategy that was developed for a Backtest-Rookies development service customer. Published for verification, testing and acceptance. If you are interested in development services send me a message or visit the backtest-rookies (.com) webiste for more information Consecutive Up/Down Days - Custom Indicator The indicator builds upon the built-in...
Custom Indicator development published for customer verification and acceptance. Features Generate buy / sell signals if x number of candles following a fractal are up/down. Generate an early warning (background color change) if x - 1 candles following a fractal are up/down Generate alerts for buy/sell signals and early warning.
The Consecutive Candle Count creates a histogram by tallying the number of consecutive up and down candle closes.
The Two Versions of this Indicator I learned from Two Famous and Highly Successful Traders. This Indicator shows With No Lag Clear Up and Down Trends in Market by Documenting Clearly If Bulls or Bears are in Control. The Version In SubChart 1 Shows Consecutive Closes if the Current Close is Greater than of Less than the Midpoint of the Previous Bar (Why Midpoint...