🔸 Stochastic Settings (K, D, Period) - **What it does**: These control how the first stochastic oscillator works. Think of it as measuring momentum speed. - **K**: Determines how smooth the main stochastic line is. Lower values (1-3) react quickly, higher values (3-9) are smoother. - **D**: Controls the smoothness of the signal line. Usually kept equal to or slightly higher than K. - **Period**: How many candles are used to calculate the stochastic. Standard is 14 days, lower for faster signals. - **For beginners**: Start with the defaults (K:3, D:3, Period:14) until you understand how they work.
🔸 Second Stochastic (K2, D2, Period2) - **What it does**: Creates a second, independent stochastic for stronger confirmation. - **How to use**: Can be set identical to the first one, or with slightly different values for dual confirmation. - **For beginners**: Start with the same values as the first stochastic, then experiment.
🔸 RSI Length - **What it does**: Controls the period for the RSI calculation, which measures buying/selling pressure. - **Lower values** (7-9): More sensitive, good for short-term trading - **Higher values** (14-21): More stable, better for swing trading - **For beginners**: The default of 11 is a good balance between speed and reliability.
🔸 Cross Level - **What it does**: The centerline where crosses generate signals (default is 50). - **Traditional levels**: Stochastics typically use 20/80, but 50 works well for this combined indicator. - **For beginners**: Keep at 50 to focus on trend following strategies.
🔸 Source - **What it does**: Determines which price data is used for calculations. - **Common options**: - Close: Most common and reliable - Open: Less common - High/Low: Used for specialized indicators - **For beginners**: Stick with "close" as it's most commonly used and reliable.
🎨 Visual Theme Settings
🔸 Bullish/Bearish Main - **What it does**: Sets the overall color scheme for bullish (up) and bearish (down) movements. - **For beginners**: Green for bullish and red for bearish is intuitive, but choose any colors that are easy for you to distinguish.
🔸 Bullish/Bearish Entry - **What it does**: Colors for the entry signals shown directly on the chart. - **For beginners**: Use bright, attention-grabbing colors that stand out from your chart background.
🌈 Line Colors
🔸 K1, K2, RSI (Bullish/Bearish) - **What it does**: Controls the colors of each indicator line based on market direction. - **For beginners**: Use different colors for each line so you can quickly identify which line is which.
⏱️ HTF (Higher Timeframe) Settings
🔸 HTF Timeframe - **What it does**: Sets which higher timeframe to use for filtering (e.g., 240 = 4 hour chart). - **How to choose**: Should be at least 4x your current chart timeframe (e.g., if trading on 15min, use 60min or higher). - **For beginners**: Start with a timeframe 4x higher than your trading chart.
🔸 Use HTF Filter - **What it does**: Toggles whether the higher timeframe filter is applied or not. - **For beginners**: Keep enabled to reduce false signals, especially when learning.
🔸 HTF Confirmation Bars - **What it does**: How many bars must confirm a trend change on higher timeframe. - **Higher values**: More reliable but slower to react - **Lower values**: Faster signals but more false positives - **For beginners**: Start with 2-3 bars for a good balance.
📈 EMA Settings
🔸 Use EMA Filter - **What it does**: Toggles price filtering with an Exponential Moving Average. - **For beginners**: Keep enabled for better trend confirmation.
🔸 EMA Period - **What it does**: Length of the EMA for filtering (shorter = faster reactions). - **Common values**: - 5-13: Short-term trends - 21-50: Medium-term trends - 100-200: Long-term trends - **For beginners**: 5-10 is good for short-term trading, 21 for swing trading.
🔸 EMA Offset - **What it does**: Shifts the EMA forward or backward on the chart. - **For beginners**: Start with 0 and adjust only if needed for visual clarity.
🔸 Show EMA on Chart - **What it does**: Toggles whether the EMA appears on your main price chart. - **For beginners**: Keep enabled to see how price relates to the EMA.
🔸 EMA Color, Style, Width, Transparency - **What it does**: Customizes how the EMA line looks on your chart. - **For beginners**: Choose settings that make the EMA visible but not distracting.
🌊 Trend Filter Settings
🔸 Use EMA Trend Filter - **What it does**: Enables a multi-EMA system that defines the overall market trend. - **For beginners**: Keep enabled for stronger trend confirmation.
🔸 Show Trend EMAs - **What it does**: Toggles visibility of the trend EMAs on your chart. - **For beginners**: Enable to see how price moves relative to multiple EMAs. 🔸 EMA Line Thickness - **What it does**: Controls how the thickness of EMA lines is determined. - **Options**: - Uniform: All EMAs have the same thickness - Variable: Each EMA has its own custom thickness - Hierarchical: Automatically sized based on period (longer periods = thicker) - **For beginners**: "Hierarchical" is most intuitive as longer-term EMAs appear more dominant.
🔸 EMA Line Style - **What it does**: Sets the line style (solid, dotted, dashed) for all EMAs. - **For beginners**: "Solid" is usually clearest unless you have many lines overlapping.
🎭 Trend Filter Colors/Width
🔸 EMA Colors (8, 21, 34, 55) - **What it does**: Sets the color for each individual trend EMA. - **For beginners**: Use a logical progression (e.g., shorter EMAs brighter, longer EMAs darker).
🔸 EMA Width Settings - **What it does**: Controls the thickness of each EMA line. - **For beginners**: Thicker lines for longer EMAs make them easier to distinguish.
🔔 How These Parameters Work Together
The power of this indicator comes from how these components interact:
1. **Base Oscillator**: The stochastic and RSI components create the main oscillator 2. **HTF Filter**: The higher timeframe filter prevents trading against larger trends 3. **EMA Filter**: The EMA filter confirms signals with price action 4. **Trend System**: The multi-EMA system identifies the overall market environment
Think of it as multiple layers of confirmation, each adding more reliability to your trading signals.
💡 Tips for Beginners
1. **Start with defaults**: Use the default settings first and understand what each element does 2. **One change at a time**: When customizing, change only one parameter at a time 3. **Keep notes**: Write down how each change affects your results 4. **Backtest thoroughly**: Test any changes on historical data before trading real money 5. **Less is more**: Sometimes simpler settings work better than complicated ones
Remember, no indicator is perfect - always combine this with proper risk management and other forms of analysis!
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W duchu TradingView twórca tego skryptu udostępnił go jako open-source, aby traderzy mogli analizować i weryfikować jego funkcjonalność. Brawo dla autora! Możesz korzystać z niego za darmo, ale pamiętaj, że ponowna publikacja kodu podlega naszym Zasadom Społeczności.
Aby uzyskać szybki dostęp na wykresie, dodaj ten skrypt do ulubionych — więcej informacji tutaj.
Informacje i publikacje przygotowane przez TradingView lub jego użytkowników, prezentowane na tej stronie, nie stanowią rekomendacji ani porad handlowych, inwestycyjnych i finansowych i nie powinny być w ten sposób traktowane ani wykorzystywane. Więcej informacji na ten temat znajdziesz w naszym Regulaminie.