bar channels
Page 1 of 613 123 LastLast
Results 1 to 10 of 21

Thread: bar channels

  1. #1
    demo


    (overall, as of 07232010)


    description

    candlesticks. Logarithm vs. midline nature of them. To go mostly just one way; or, express a deadlock between two of the same; ora build one way and then a spasmodic letgo of that build because of crossed direction of pressure.

    -------------LINE PATTERNS: four descriptions of types 1-5-------------

    NAME (APPEARANCE)
    1 inner (pivot/dot, level/line)
    two both/shape (blur)
    3 repeated
    4 rolling (distinguished / L:M-repeated)
    5 castle (symmetric) opt. Off rolling
    CHARACTERISTIC (EXPRESSION OF PRESSURE)
    1 a simple internal L:M connection
    2 regular polygon (n=3-4, boundless: triangle, square, circle; to produce scatter, line)
    3 proxy line balancing the other TL's fro,at,to
    4 dependent dot or line (place ) the patterns related to it actively respond with L:M-wise
    5 parallel (hi,lo, mid accurate, mid natural, logr) lines
    CONTINUITY (NO FALSE EXPRESSIONS OF OVERALL DIRECTION)
    1 N with occasional semi Y aid to pivot
    2 marginally random percent of Y
    3 instant N in pattern's area, then Y to get a medium while after
    4 Y within its set area and then during TLs' affect
    5 Y, multiply split (just split, with rolling) and thus, in a sense, forever
    CONTROL (LENGTH OF HOLD PRESSURE HAS ON DIRECTION)
    1 instant
    two shape-dependent
    3 moderate
    4 proportional (while some others do)
    5 reframes always (anchors for long lasting, off rolling)




    ----------different indiors to help pick potent and easy line patterns---------Volume Teacher v4. High-volume candles low then quite low - volume candles, candles that are low-volume. Matching, opposing price range in the bar(s)/candle(s); helps pick stronger TL's when blended with other indiors. 1,2,3,5,8,13,21,34 sma's, single colour (private, probably not perfect, options ) on'None' all the period ). V's and tiny circles with all lines within them. Price-time line progression along TL segments that are horizontal. Market Hours. 2-12 pm explosive calm, 1-3 pm flip. Change in fashion, opposing repetition. DutchCandle. Ordered (ex. 's: strong, spike, logr-curved ramp, horizontal ramp, apartment, mountain, valley, and plateau) shapes to figure direction and draw TL's from. Zigzag. Symmetry (pivot trend) angles. Entire-area pivot switches, logr that is repeated's from many others, and one s/r touch to the next. A awareness of the angles helps, particularly in speedy read of chart. and others Examples example 1: slideshow, template; ex 2: s, t; ex 3: s, t; ex 4: s, t







    .


    ____________________________


    (older overall)


    .... Line patterns....
    How I see it, chart patterns are all made to draw TL's that determine where the price-time line will go next. The pinnacle of drawing TL's from line patterns is when you can find a lot of TL sets in a row that explain how the area operates in relation to the remaining part of the chart areas of the identical size. This really is a TL series.
    After I made my first TL series, I was finally convinced that it is possible to draw the more obtuse TL collections and hope them without the chart history right in front of me. This impression should boost.

    Http://tinypic.com/view.php?pic=2ls8k0ls=5 of all the types of TL's I typically find powerful, and lots of examples of TL's with this template (each with an EST template, a sketch, or pictures of close-up of the area ahead of the TL (place ), TL (place )'s source, progression and its lines, end stage of its lines, or general impression): http://s000.tinyupload.com/?file_id=...48899962460479 , , ; http://s000.tinyupload.com/?file_id=...48714107255357 , , ; 3 http://s000.tinyupload.com/?file_id=...58795837789828, http://s000.tinyupload.com/?file_id=...22748321954153 , source ,,,, overall ,,,,;
    TL string (which uses simple logic to follow one TL (place ) following another, every TL (place )'s place regular or condensed/expanding) (templates (in EST), some with images ): http://s000.tinyupload.com/?file_id=...70701738342560,






    Individual chart drawing ideas. House of bsTL's, a review. Includes logarithmic cycles

    09192010 viral grid -- ordinary ex. and its http://s000.tinyupload.com/file_uplo...8672835gk=hyip. Draw a ideal angle of two trends, just, have no connecting point; afterward, with same numbers and the usual halving (90, 45, 22.5 degrees), start at a third anchor and then subdivide it for the next few directions.

    05172010 made a template of

    05162010 a usually useless early (called this by the days I submitted charts using a series of pip lines that had early lines that never touched anything) line crosses using a level line to create a crossover stage, whereupon a third line is drawn by means of this crossover line from a similar candle setup into the early line's

    05072010 a 2-repeater using a weighted third earning line move backwards a)
    a 3-repeater using a derivational midline that runs from price-time line entry to exit between the fan TL's b)

    04222010 a deviation TL and a midline
    -- 05162010 restudy: Price centered at 1.534, not the reduced set of white lines at hre; consequently the midline shown required its midpoint to be in the middle of both sets of lines that are white, which is a lot easier to know than to try and figure which line in the top set of white lines to pick.

    04102010

    On a well-balanced line like an anything line, multiple midlines between distinct turns along with a pivot-set anything line permit extra use of anything line:




    05172010 A multiple example of drawing from the above mentioned type of pivot through a considerable midline, that is, , , , ,, is given in this http://s000.tinyupload.com/?file_id=...04394452761797 (EST).

    A similar thought is a corner that the price-time line supports the lines of -- Draw two lines ninety degrees apart, then draw a TL exactly between them (45 degrees) or at a 90 degree angle from the 45 degree angle within the corner. Shown is this together a logarithmic settle from a top, so that the price-time line rolls the 45 degree TL made once (using a couple more to be sure) then rebounds to not return: ,

    (these two go with the remainder, to complete picture) ,

    another use of vertical-angle trends around a pivot: The last use of a lt TL:

    03--2010
    One aim of mine is to earn every single TL I draw as informative as you can, in particular how small patterns respond to the TL and change the next pivot's time and direction. (The method'condensed logr' does include valuable interpretation of the chart; the highlighted shapes develop on the TL sufficient to create worthwhile keeping the TL. It's a good example of how I work to view pivots, so that the place following the pivot can be understood with extra TL's from and around that pivot.)





    Here's a new approach to draw trendlines. Enjoy and share.

    To me, trendlines range from being anchored at a single place on a bar to function as or at the midpoint between two other points. BsTL's would be the former, pip lines fall someplace in the middle, and trend (or even 89sma) centerlines the latter.

    Edit: 89sma centerlines could be non-89sma-related, the listing below excludes one-pip lines (that have been, for a while, under balance lines, and which link two successive bars each with a one-pip disperse,) and the emphasis is now on one-pip lines across hi-lo stations, the latter of which many of below discusses or gives example for all types of.

    Another thread's article indicates an example of proficient use of.

    An specific way to draw out a midline for any bar station would be to make, in 11 scale, a place where the two lines cross, draw a horizontal midline whose middle is at that point, draw a vertical midline at each side of that horizontal midline, and draw a ray between each one of those vertical midlines.

    Learned how to draw pip lines better: A lot of bars seem like 1,2,3 pips broad, and are 1 pip broad, and visa-versa; also, just a specific range inside the 1psb's is the body, although it is only using a 1 pip spread.

    Other threads' inclusions: 1, 2, 3





    A few of the best kinds of comprise same-spread, that affects/studies a close-up, streamlined region; small-spread patterns, each of that endeavor TL's of the influence to a broad, thin, spread area; balance lines, each of which influence a moderate, compact region; convergence lines, which influence a large, streamlined region from 1 vantage point; also, crossover points, that projects TL's of the influence to a large, streamlined area from just about any direction. Finding spread patterns takes practice. A couple of starters on where to find them are within an area
    with

    comparison --
    Little, very low-spread areas alongside very high-spread bars and inside a logr curve (natural (vs.'logarithmic cycle', a construct applied to a indior like bsTL's)) for its high-spread bar (gt; 5' TF)
    balance --
    the broadest, most-balanced regions (gt; condensed 1 TF)
    conclusion --
    a measure of the volatility of each of successive screen-wide areas showing one area that seems to'conclude' those ahead of it (1' TF)
    elevation --
    the highest-spread bar in dozens of displays (various TF's)
    bunches of high-spread bars (gt; in reduced TF's)
    a tiny area in which the price-time line'bowties' through it (various TF's)
    event --
    the Friday-Sunday gap (expanded 1'TF)
    some of (NFP,: ) the most high-impact news, if coupled with an otherwise unexplainable, very large wave area or other odd shape (mid (5'-30') TF)

    and any other types of areas successful are found in.
    Once get into the 1'TF of this selected region, a logarithmic cycle using bsTL's will be well worth doing around and until the odd spread pattern found.

    -----

    summary

    Charts are in a range of spikes and its own digestion, to balance and its volatility; place with current vertical lines, that is, news and sessions, these two egories group news lines, session (flat ) midlines, and 5'TF spikes, and then news (flat ) midlines, session outlines, and flat accounts, respectively.



    To measure around these lines as well as their midlines:1' just: Logarithmic cycles (described as trend centerlines ( trend centerlines' right angle (or, basically the same, where some are parallel or same-origin-point), that is variously using its midline an in-trend or fall from the top of the trend ) and also the same-spread (particularly the opposite doji and the spinning tops separately forming s/r lines or bunches that run endlessly throughout the cycle) after they find closure with level (go flat ), find a spread pattern, and create a dot to the turn ) on the 1' 1', used longterm: Logarithmic cycles that follow along (or, sometimes, precede) a large build-up that requires explaining, such as many condensed-1' regions of different volatilities, a huge wave that has close its end an NFP news thing, an especially large little - (or other-) disperse pattern, or an especially well-placed, regular event like the Friday close's bar channel ascertaining the Sunday open gap and thus need to stay on the chart more than the usual 1' one An individual can save time making templates for current vertical lines (news, session, 5'TF spikes) and for l.c.'s used for much more of their longterm view.

    -----

    Making bsTL's more exact: 1,, ;


    - Assess the background of a price to observe the way the chart acted around itnote special patterns starting at the price. Draw interior of a random spread pattern, however great it is; among those pattern-based derandomizers like eur/usd patterns's #61-2's shape regions and related noted in the diary's entry only after then, can determine trend direction or instill purpose inside the pattern.

    12312009 New approach's TL anchor fluctuates from a couple/one to a complicated, little pattern to random-and-separate:
    bl(|,/ or _, independently ).... a couple/one
    sp(| or _, alternating).... A complicated, little pattern
    md-tcs(|_).... Random-and-separate
    -- a variance of logarithmic cycles, in which balance line includes level and dot. Expands tc, modulates bl, lets sp be.

    1012010 Another strategy pvbl anywhere, where previously defined with either tcs-lsa-ld or sp-(0-90 right angle) balance:


    A large ol' 5'TF-effective bsTL (as idea) and an edued guess drawing its own logic string (as reason to utilize idea) to fulfill it is sufficient to trade . (01032010)

    02052010 A fad's progress of intersection, for example, intersection's leadership and thus period it intersects:






    -----

    component of this bsTL microverse: Overview, patterns (or, people who have more or fewer candles ), TF use, trading. (And its potential: automatic; accurate.)

  2. #2
    In each example, I strive to create the pictures self-explanatory. More detail is at the words.



    Alright, here is your average trendlines. I may have drawn them somewhat off, they may be in the wrong place, etc.. The point isthese are trendlines.
    The difficulty I discovered with regular trendlines is they are poorly connected with the remainder of the chart. Why draw on themreally? The price has returned to this price (on a horizontal line) or row of prices (on a trendline). That's it.

    With pub spread trendlines, you get more. Drawn well, pub spread trendlines project the general flow of prices for the next few hundred bars; at least, they're one reason, and thus an influence on the way, the several prices are doing what they are doing.
    Allow me to give you an example. It may be a poor one, please bear with me.
    The market started in GBP/USD. There was an initial collapse, as happens on Sunday's open, jarring the patterns from the week before. There posts a lot of pubs which have low spreads; a low-spread place, if you will. It is not an extraordinary low-spread place, it has an interruption in the center of it (which I saw with CDRW Spread) to give one pause whether to consider it like a decent low-spread location. Just, the pair of spreads that are non is big enough in the ideal place, right with a drop, which makes in one's mind's eye, even if not on the display, a ninety-degree angle. Anyhow, it's significant.

    So the low-spread area ends, along with a quantity spike (that I saw with TicksSeparateVolume, which provides separate down and up amounts on the exact same pub and with ticks, the most-accurate emblematic unit forex has, so far as I know, of quantity ) begins a new price-time line place. (Yes, I have read, quantity is notoriously poor in forex. I'm just considering comparative quantity (see VSA threads for more information) for medium-to-high contrasting worth of quantity, so marginally off values are fine. Just divide the usefulness of quantity into several variables such as I have, and you'll know where I'm in on this.)
    This new price-time line place, it turns out, is the beginning of a response of Sunday's first drop with the low-spread region which follows it. That response is happening, more than ten hours 1' pubs afterwards. This is how I drew the pair of pub spread trendlines: I shot the high and low of the pub that split the low-spread region and drew a pub channel to the high and low of the bar that went with the quantity spike which ended the low-spread location. I made a ray of each MT4 trendline by checking off the little box and condensed the chart's spacing of its own bars to look at the effect of my pub station. What I discovered, obtaining the hindsight of many hours of pubs, was that, initially, this pub channel crossed, and it crossed fast, and prices tasked with each line following the crosspoint; soit was a crosschannel.

    (Note: When anyone takes exception to the titles, suggest another, and I'll gladly look at using yours instead. This applies to the whole notion's anchor title of'pub spread trendlines'.)
    The crosschannel, fortunately for me, feeds nicely into the flow of the chart. There breaking up the crosschannel, neighborhood midlines surrounding a single line or midline of this crosschannel, and thus one. A pub spread trendline.




    That's my first case.

  3. #3
    To draw a bar-spread trendline multiscreen:


    1. Place left side of trendline on spot on first pub. Emphasize trendline.

    2. Channels: Place drag it and ends.




    3. The goal is several screens away.




    4. Drag trendline(s) across condensed bars onto a greater TF to next pub.




    5. Attach trendline(s) to new pub. Check'column' on each trendline.


  4. #4
    Extra uses of a bar-spread trendline:


    midline, deviation




    illustration from article #1




    crossline pivot




    overlapping different-width and -kind bar-spread trendlines



    helper lines:

    -- vertical dotted lines, to denote substantial bar in a bunch

    -- (highlighted) arrow, to denote substantial bar in a bunch

    -- highlighted solid trendlines, to find midline or deviation from another line

    -- trendlines, to overlay and also approximate a line's path one wants to expand

    -- box, to pay an study region that may produce a lineup

    -- copied drawn things, to possess an approximate shape to adjust from
    (Highlight drawn things, then press'control' while left-click item and drag.)

    -- increase/decrease diameter between bars, to Locate a bar or carry a lineup

    -- TF alter, to find a bar or carry a lineup

    -- increase/decrease chart height (width) -- attract mouse arrow into chart's rightside (bottom) numbers, click and hold left button, and drag mouse upward (to the left)

    -- indiors:

    CDRW Spread -- selects varying price bar spreads (ex. Level, .0005 to get g/u)

    TicksSeparateVolume: Selects contrasting price bar spreads using volume

    ToggleRegandHACandlesShiftv2: Shows height of each bar because of its purpose to comparison from (ex.s of point: high, mid, low, fib) with heiken-ashi, or to utilize normal candles to match volume indiors with more easily

    89sma: Helps create a certain kind of line related to bar-spread trendlines

    bettervolume: VSA also helps find bars CDRW Spread sometimes misses

    -- indior levels, to offer average comparison the bar one uses has

  5. #5
    Kinds of bar-spread trendlines

    All of bar-spread trendlines depend on contrast.

    Contrast variables:
    relative/absolute,
    low/high,
    even/uneven or same/more or less,
    far/close,
    and 0/1/2-3/little bunch / medium to large bunch

    Many examples of bar-spread trendlines are Bar channels, which are 2 bars each with a spread of relatively the same and also high, the spread's contrast factors balanced with just how relatively much of a distance there is between the 2 bars to maintain a reasonably useful set of unevenly-parallel trendlines crosschannels, that are 2 bars each with a spread of relatively less or more and also large, the spread's contrast factors balanced with just how relatively close of a distance there is between the 2 bars to sustain a reasonably useful set of crossing trendlines balance lines, which can be 2 bars each with a spread of relatively the same and also low and, for such a particular type, too of the appearance of balance both within the bar and within an area between it and its high-spread bar
    Midlines and deviations of absolute-to-the-bar-spread trendlines or inside a local/relative/perhaps fib capability around among those trendlines, are often applied to bar-spread trendlines.

    89sma centerlines, associated with bar-spread trendlines, are attracted when a trend runs relatively perpendicular to the 89sma line along with also the 89sma line neatly divides in half of the trend; sometimes, one also finds a trend that runs nearly absolutely perpendicular to the 89sma and yet is still only on one side of their 89sma lineup, in which case one can also draw a midline and then, of a trendline, a flat line that rays to the right.

  6. #6
    Most important, of course, would be to catch the idea of a chart area enough to trade profitably on it. Thus, instead of giving examples of this bar-spread trendlines discovered to now, I will go on and continue together with the market, using contrast factors to explain each bar-spread trendline I make and attempt a justifiion of my representation of a particular area only connected to the spread trendlines there.

    -----

    GBP/USD 1' has a nice low area preceding a decent 45-degreeish rise. Ahead of this particular area is a commonplace spread that is 20ish. The following spread distinguished on a condensed chart is really a 29 spread, so I will draw a pub channel on the high and low of these two bars.



    pub channel --
    upper trendline:2009.06.08 19:35 1.610386 2009.06.09 06:37 1.613952
    lower trendline: 2009.06.08 19:35 1.608566 2009.06.09 06:35 1.608714



  7. #7
    Here's a detailed explanation of how one may choose what sort of disperse trendline to use to a place:







    The notion faded into midpoints, if there really wasn't assistance (a pub station rather than the very first rally following the balance line) for anything, after most of the retrace: .

    Anyhow, all the history have ; will look for another intriguing spread to begin.

  8. #8
    A sample pattern derived from pub channels:





    , which proceeds , together with .

  9. #9
    A new

    forms of bar spread trendlines

    relies on geometric dimension, in other words,
    scatter, line, triangle, and square (or rather( parallel lines).

    Fundamental: occasionally work
    compound: generally operate; adjusted outside, for example multiple dim forms, or inside, as refining the line to fit the purpose

    illustrations:
    fundamental: scatter: one-pip-spread bar - to - 1psb trendline ray, or, pip lineup
    . Lineup: bar channel of typical, even spread widths
    . Triangle: a bar channel involving a top spread plus a low, maybe not 1psb, disperse
    . Square: deviation lines of one of those above
    compound: a pip line with a wide, oscillating price-time lineup at its start
    . A pip line having an odd pattern on one side and the same pattern replicated, if occasionally also flipped on the perpendicular or flat, on the other side
    . A pip line with a narrow, flat price-time lineup at its start
    . A bar channel with a very high spread bar along with a 1psb, along with an excess pip lineup following them
    . A bar channel with 2 close-set, really high spread pubs, which have a moderately high spread bar in the center, and an mhsb following the bar channel
    . A set of unusually-symmetric 1' TF regular candles, from a 15' TF chart demonstrating an extremely low spread region with very high spread areas or bars on both sides of the region, which one draws pip lines amongst that afterwards make bar channels
    . News-based bar spread trendlines, which can use mhsb's
    . A ton of pip lines which, taken together, point in just a few instructions and provide hint lines which, once the price-time line traces through themtell which direction is going to be taken
    . Two quite high spread bars which are remote from each other
    . A line in the center of a trend, which, to fit the data, slightly redefines how a bar spread trendline is made, and which shows its usefulness during the price-time line obeying deviations from this lineup
    . Horizontal pip lines



    -----

    A certain area will rank and consequently assist choose bar spread trendlines through news event, pattern and these.

  10. #10
    I learned a way to draw pub channels, specifically logarithmic channels. At my EUR/USD Patterns thread, post #1, I posted a simple graph relating different patterns from which one draws trendlines disperse trendlines. I fooled around with getting each microtrend and also with linking three-pip strong candles or two-pip in a fluidly-changing number of microtrends. Then I got to a run.

    The significant run also had doji and their similars, and also linking multi-pip solid candles, just they all were in a small group. I drew a ideal triangle covering the logarithmic digestion of this significant run, also discovered the pub station worked better later on when I connected the points to solids' and dojis' hi/lo's. Lots of midlines formed around this solids-dojis' line - comprised bar channels.

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  
This website uses cookies
We use cookies to store session information to facilitate remembering your login information, to allow you to save website preferences, to personalise content and ads, to provide social media features and to analyse our traffic. We also share information about your use of our site with our social media, advertising and analytics partners.