Stochastic MACDStochastic MACD (SMACD) is an oscillating momentum indicator, that combine the Stochastic oscillator and MACD (Moving Average Convergence/Divergence).
SMACD is based on the difference of two exponential moving averages (EMA) and their relative positions compared to the highest and lowest prices of a certain period (standard 45).
A possible high/low is around 15, so those values have been marked with a dotted line.
SMACD have proven to better show positive/negative divergences compared to the traditional MACD indicator. The indicator itself is very close to the MACD, but differ in the way you can compare the historical values.
Smacd
Advanced MACDThis is a more advanced version of the standard moving average convergence/divergence indicator (MACD). It allows you to change the type of all moving averages (Simple, Exponential, Weighted, Volume-weighted, Triple EMA or a moving average that uses RSI). By for example setting the period to 3/10/16 and use simple moving averages instead of exponential moving averages you can turn it into the modified version of the MACD oscillator (mMACD) described in detail in Appendix B in the book "The Art and Science of Technical Analysis: Market Structure, Price Action and Trading Strategies" by Adam Grimes.
The indicator also allows you to volume weight the indicator (turned on by default), which will turn it into a Volume-Weighted Moving Average Convergence Divergence (VW-MACD) first used by Buff Pelz Dormeier in 2002 and described in detail in his book "Investing with Volume Analysis: Identify, Follow, and Profit from Trends". If you want to weight the oscillator against the true range instead of volume this is also possible. By default, this will be done automatically for assets that do not support volume.