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Zaktualizowano Smart Money Support/Resistance — Lite

Smart Money Support/Resistance — Lite
Overview & Methodology
This indicator identifies support and resistance as zones derived from concentrated buying and selling pressure, rather than relying solely on traditional swing highs/lows. Its design focuses on transparency: how data is sourced, how zones are computed, and how the on‑chart display should be interpreted.
Lower‑Timeframe (LTF) Data
The script requests Up Volume, Down Volume, and Volume Delta from a lower timeframe to expose intrabar order‑flow structure that the chart’s native timeframe cannot show. In practical terms, this lets you see where buyers or sellers briefly dominated inside the body of a higher‑timeframe bar.
Pine Script®
• Data source: TradingView’s ta.requestUpAndDownVolume(lowerTf) via the official TA library.
• Plan capabilities: higher‑tier subscriptions unlock seconds‑based charts and allow more historical bars per chart. This expands both the temporal depth of LTF data and the precision of short‑horizon analysis, while base tiers provide minute‑level data suitable for day/short‑swing studies.
• Coverage clarity: a small on‑chart Coverage Panel reports the active lower timeframe, the number of bars covered, and the latest computed support/resistance ranges so you always know the bounds of valid LTF input.

Core Method
1) Data acquisition (LTF)
The script retrieves three series from the chosen lower timeframe:
– Up Volume (buyers)
– Down Volume (sellers)
– Delta (Up – Down)
2) Rolling window & extrema
Over a user‑defined lookback (Global Volume Period), the algorithm builds rolling arrays of completed bars and scans for extrema:
– Buyers_max / Buyers_min from Up Volume
– Sellers_max / Sellers_min from Down Volume
Only completed bars are considered; the current bar is excluded for stability.
3) Price mapping
The extrema are mapped back to their source candles to obtain price bounds:
– For “maximum” roles the algorithm uses the relevant candle highs.
– For “minimum” roles it uses the relevant candle lows.
These pairs define candidate resistance (max‑based) and support (min‑based) zones or vice versa.
4) Zone construction & minimum width
To ensure practicality on all symbols, zones enforce a minimum vertical thickness of two ticks. This prevents visually invisible or overly thin ranges on instruments with tight ticks.
5) Vertical role resolution
When both max‑ and min‑based zones exist, the script compares their midpoints. If, due to local price structure, the min‑based zone sits above the max‑based zone, display roles are swapped so the higher zone is labeled Resistance and the lower zone Support. Colors/widths are updated accordingly to keep the visual legend consistent.
6) Rendering & panel
Two horizontal lines and a filled box represent each active zone. The Coverage Panel (bottom‑right by default) prints:
– Lower‑timeframe in use
– Number of bars covered by LTF data
– Current Support and Resistance ranges
If the two zones overlap, an additional “Range Market” note is shown.
Key Inputs
• Global Volume Period: shared lookback window for the extrema search.
• Lower timeframe: user‑selectable override of the automatically resolved lower timeframe.
• Visualization toggles: independent show/hide controls and colors for maximum (resistance) and minimum (support) zones.
• Coverage Panel: enable/disable the single‑cell table and its readout.
Operational Notes
• The algorithm aligns all lookups to completed bars (no peeking). Price references are shifted appropriately to avoid using the still‑forming bar in calculations.
• Second‑based lower timeframes improve granularity for scalping and very short‑term entries. Minute‑based lower timeframes provide broader coverage for intraday and short‑swing contexts.
• Use the Coverage Panel to confirm the true extent of available LTF history on your symbol/plan before drawing conclusions from very deep lookbacks.
Visual Walkthrough
A step‑by‑step image sequence accompanies this description. Each figure demonstrates how the indicator reads LTF volume, locates extrema, builds price‑mapped zones, and updates labels/colors when vertical order requires it.

Chart Interpretation
This chart illustrates two distinct perspectives of the Smart Money Support/Resistance — Lite indicator, each derived from different lookback horizons and lower-timeframe (LTF) resolutions.
1- Short-term view (43 bars, 10-second LTF)
Using the most recent 43 completed bars with 10-second intrabar data, the algorithm detects that both maximum and minimum volume extrema fall within a narrow range. The result is a clearly identified range market: resistance between 178.15–184.55 and support between 175.02–179.38.
The Coverage Panel (bottom-right) confirms the scope of valid input: the lower timeframe used, number of bars covered, and the resulting zones. This short-term scan highlights how the indicator adapts to limited data depth, flagging sideways structure where neither side dominates.
2 - Long-term view (120 bars, 30-second LTF)
Over a wider 120-bar lookback with higher-granularity 30-second data, broader supply and demand zones emerge.
– The long-term resistance zone captures the concentration of buyers and sellers at the upper boundary of recent price history.
– The long-term support zone anchors to the opposite side of the distribution, derived from maxima and minima of both buying and selling pressure.
These zones reflect deeper structural levels where market participants previously committed significant volume.
Combined Perspective
By aligning the short-term and long-term outputs, the chart shows how the indicator distinguishes immediate consolidation (range market) from more durable support and resistance levels derived from extended history. This dual resolution approach makes clear that support and resistance are not static lines but dynamic zones, dependent on both timeframe depth and the resolution of intrabar volume data.
Overview & Methodology
This indicator identifies support and resistance as zones derived from concentrated buying and selling pressure, rather than relying solely on traditional swing highs/lows. Its design focuses on transparency: how data is sourced, how zones are computed, and how the on‑chart display should be interpreted.
Lower‑Timeframe (LTF) Data
The script requests Up Volume, Down Volume, and Volume Delta from a lower timeframe to expose intrabar order‑flow structure that the chart’s native timeframe cannot show. In practical terms, this lets you see where buyers or sellers briefly dominated inside the body of a higher‑timeframe bar.
bool use_custom_tf_input = input.bool(true, title="Use custom lower timeframe", tooltip="Override the automatically chosen lower timeframe for volume calculations.", group=grpVolume)
string custom_tf_input = input. Timeframe("1", title="Lower timeframe", tooltip="Lower timeframe used for up/down volume calculations (default 5 seconds).", group=grpVolume)
import TradingView/ta/10 as tvta
resolve_lower_tf(useCustom, customTF) =>
useCustom ? customTF :
timeframe.isseconds ? "1S" :
timeframe.isintraday ? "1" :
timeframe.isdaily ? "5" : "60"
get_up_down_volume(lowerTf) =>
[u, d, dl] = tvta.requestUpAndDownVolume(lowerTf)
[math.abs(u), math.abs(d), dl]
var float upVolume = na
var float downVolume = na
var float deltaVolume = na
string lower_tf = resolve_lower_tf(use_custom_tf_input, custom_tf_input)
[u_tmp, d_tmp, dl_tmp] = get_up_down_volume(lower_tf)
upVolume := u_tmp
downVolume := d_tmp
deltaVolume := dl_tmp
• Data source: TradingView’s ta.requestUpAndDownVolume(lowerTf) via the official TA library.
• Plan capabilities: higher‑tier subscriptions unlock seconds‑based charts and allow more historical bars per chart. This expands both the temporal depth of LTF data and the precision of short‑horizon analysis, while base tiers provide minute‑level data suitable for day/short‑swing studies.
• Coverage clarity: a small on‑chart Coverage Panel reports the active lower timeframe, the number of bars covered, and the latest computed support/resistance ranges so you always know the bounds of valid LTF input.
Core Method
1) Data acquisition (LTF)
The script retrieves three series from the chosen lower timeframe:
– Up Volume (buyers)
– Down Volume (sellers)
– Delta (Up – Down)
2) Rolling window & extrema
Over a user‑defined lookback (Global Volume Period), the algorithm builds rolling arrays of completed bars and scans for extrema:
– Buyers_max / Buyers_min from Up Volume
– Sellers_max / Sellers_min from Down Volume
Only completed bars are considered; the current bar is excluded for stability.
3) Price mapping
The extrema are mapped back to their source candles to obtain price bounds:
– For “maximum” roles the algorithm uses the relevant candle highs.
– For “minimum” roles it uses the relevant candle lows.
These pairs define candidate resistance (max‑based) and support (min‑based) zones or vice versa.
4) Zone construction & minimum width
To ensure practicality on all symbols, zones enforce a minimum vertical thickness of two ticks. This prevents visually invisible or overly thin ranges on instruments with tight ticks.
5) Vertical role resolution
When both max‑ and min‑based zones exist, the script compares their midpoints. If, due to local price structure, the min‑based zone sits above the max‑based zone, display roles are swapped so the higher zone is labeled Resistance and the lower zone Support. Colors/widths are updated accordingly to keep the visual legend consistent.
6) Rendering & panel
Two horizontal lines and a filled box represent each active zone. The Coverage Panel (bottom‑right by default) prints:
– Lower‑timeframe in use
– Number of bars covered by LTF data
– Current Support and Resistance ranges
If the two zones overlap, an additional “Range Market” note is shown.
Key Inputs
• Global Volume Period: shared lookback window for the extrema search.
• Lower timeframe: user‑selectable override of the automatically resolved lower timeframe.
• Visualization toggles: independent show/hide controls and colors for maximum (resistance) and minimum (support) zones.
• Coverage Panel: enable/disable the single‑cell table and its readout.
Operational Notes
• The algorithm aligns all lookups to completed bars (no peeking). Price references are shifted appropriately to avoid using the still‑forming bar in calculations.
• Second‑based lower timeframes improve granularity for scalping and very short‑term entries. Minute‑based lower timeframes provide broader coverage for intraday and short‑swing contexts.
• Use the Coverage Panel to confirm the true extent of available LTF history on your symbol/plan before drawing conclusions from very deep lookbacks.
Visual Walkthrough
A step‑by‑step image sequence accompanies this description. Each figure demonstrates how the indicator reads LTF volume, locates extrema, builds price‑mapped zones, and updates labels/colors when vertical order requires it.
Chart Interpretation
This chart illustrates two distinct perspectives of the Smart Money Support/Resistance — Lite indicator, each derived from different lookback horizons and lower-timeframe (LTF) resolutions.
1- Short-term view (43 bars, 10-second LTF)
Using the most recent 43 completed bars with 10-second intrabar data, the algorithm detects that both maximum and minimum volume extrema fall within a narrow range. The result is a clearly identified range market: resistance between 178.15–184.55 and support between 175.02–179.38.
The Coverage Panel (bottom-right) confirms the scope of valid input: the lower timeframe used, number of bars covered, and the resulting zones. This short-term scan highlights how the indicator adapts to limited data depth, flagging sideways structure where neither side dominates.
2 - Long-term view (120 bars, 30-second LTF)
Over a wider 120-bar lookback with higher-granularity 30-second data, broader supply and demand zones emerge.
– The long-term resistance zone captures the concentration of buyers and sellers at the upper boundary of recent price history.
– The long-term support zone anchors to the opposite side of the distribution, derived from maxima and minima of both buying and selling pressure.
These zones reflect deeper structural levels where market participants previously committed significant volume.
Combined Perspective
By aligning the short-term and long-term outputs, the chart shows how the indicator distinguishes immediate consolidation (range market) from more durable support and resistance levels derived from extended history. This dual resolution approach makes clear that support and resistance are not static lines but dynamic zones, dependent on both timeframe depth and the resolution of intrabar volume data.
Informacje o Wersji
Update Release — Smart Money Support & Resistance LiteWhat’s New
Projection Lines: Support and resistance zones can now be extended into the future with customizable projection length, providing a clearer forward view of potential reaction levels.
Overlap Handling: When zones overlap, only the outer boundaries are projected and displayed, making chart visuals less cluttered and easier to interpret.
Coverage Panel Update: The LTF Coverage panel has been repositioned to the top-right corner for better visibility and alignment with other chart elements.
Cleaner Visuals: Improved object cleanup ensures lines and boxes refresh reliably without leaving stray drawings behind.
Smarter Messaging: Panel messages now show outer bounds in overlapping conditions, with simplified and clearer range information.
Informacje o Wersji
Smart Money Support/Resistance — New Version Highlights1. Enhanced Understanding Through Labels
In the new version, to help traders better understand how the indicator constructs support and resistance bands, the key points forming these zones (namely Buyer Max/Min and Seller Max/Min) are now displayed as labels directly on the chart. This visual clarity allows traders to see exactly how the core logic of the indicator operates, enabling more confident and informed decisions.
2. Improved Social Sharing and Context
Given TradingView's strong focus on publishing and sharing charts across social networks, the coverage panel has been extended in this version. It now displays the active symbol, timeframe, date, and time zone-adjusted clock. These additions ensure that when traders share their charts, others can immediately understand the exact analytical context behind the indicator's signals.
3. Example Charts
The following charts illustrate the indicator in action:
Chart 1 — Core Indicator Only
This chart shows the indicator by itself. The resistance and support zones are highlighted with colored bands, and the exact Buyer/Seller extremum points (B.Max, B.Min, S.Max, S.Min) are labeled. This helps traders clearly see where the most significant volume-driven turning points occurred, and how the indicator builds its S/R zones.
Chart 2 — Combined with TradingView’s Official Double Bottom
Here the indicator is combined with TradingView’s built-in Double Bottom pattern. By aligning our S/R zones with a classic chart pattern, traders can better recognize how volume-based zones confirm or strengthen traditional technical signals. This combination provides deeper insight and supports more confident decision-making.
Chart 3 — Combined with Bollinger Bands
In this lower timeframe example, a resistance zone has recently formed while support lies below. By combining the Smart Money Support/Resistance indicator with Bollinger Bands, traders can see how volume-based zones align with volatility measures, offering additional confirmation for short-term decisions.
Chart 4 — Combined with Linear Regression
In this example the Smart Money Support/Resistance zones are shown together with a linear regression channel. The volume-based support and resistance bands highlight where major turning points occurred, while the regression channel provides a broader trend context. By combining the two tools, traders can assess whether price reactions at S/R zones align with the prevailing channel direction, helping to refine entries and exits.
Chart 5 — Forward Projection with Ichimoku
In this example the Smart Money Support/Resistance zones are shifted forward by 26 periods, similar to how Ichimoku projects its cloud. This forward placement allows traders to anticipate where key support and resistance areas may interact with future price action. When combined with Ichimoku, the indicator offers a layered perspective: volume-based zones alongside trend and momentum signals, helping traders plan more proactively.
As the charts above demonstrate, when combined with price action — through patterns like Double Bottom, as well as tools such as Bollinger Bands, Linear Regression, and Ichimoku — the Buyer and Seller extrema play a decisive role in shaping meaningful support and resistance levels. Share your own experiences and feedback in the comments; your insights will help us continuously refine and improve this process of mapping out volume-driven S/R zones .[/b]
Informacje o Wersji
Update Notes1) Ignore zero-volume minima (don’t redraw on zero)
• Added a helper: `arr_extreme_idx_nonzero_min(float[] arr)` that finds the minimum index excluding zeros.
• Replaced the minima scans to use this helper:
- `buyers_min_off_core = arr_extreme_idx_nonzero_min(up_hist_core)`
- `sellers_min_off_core = arr_extreme_idx_nonzero_min(dn_hist_core)`
• Result: when the minimum volume equals 0, a new support zone is not produced; the previous state remains intact. This update improves stability by preventing recalculation of support zones when the minimum detected volume equals zero.
On some low-timeframe markets, zero-volume bars can occur (e.g., during low liquidity periods) and previously caused false minima or redraw errors.
The new logic now safely skips these cases, ensuring smoother and more consistent zone detection across all symbols and timeframes.
2) Wider label spacing to avoid overlap
• Increased the per-label stacking step in the label renderer.
• The vertical position now uses a larger step factor in:
`yLab = isTop ? (yBar + atrv_x * (base_mul_x + 0.9 * slot)) : (yBar - atrv_x * (base_mul_x + 0.9 * slot))`
• Result: labels stack further apart (top and bottom sides), reducing visual overlap. Adjust 0.9 if you need even more/less spacing.
Notes:
• No other logic was changed. Max-zone logic and all visual styles remain the same.
Skrypt open-source
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.
Wyłączenie odpowiedzialności
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.
Skrypt open-source
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.
Wyłączenie odpowiedzialności
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.