Mean Reversion Probability Zones [BigBeluga]🔵 OVERVIEW 
The  Mean Reversion Probability Zones   indicator measures the likelihood of price  reverting back toward its mean . By analyzing oscillator dynamics (RSI, MFI, or Stochastic), it calculates probability zones both above and below the oscillator. These zones are visualized as histograms, colored regions on the main chart, and a compact dashboard, helping traders spot when the market is statistically stretched and more likely to revert.
 🔵 CONCEPTS 
 
   Mean Reversion : The tendency of price to return to its average after significant extensions.
   Oscillator-Based Analysis : Uses RSI, MFI, or Stochastic as the base signal for detecting overextension.
  
   Probability Model : The probability of reversion is computed using three factors:
 
  Whether the oscillator is rising or declining.
  Whether the oscillator is above or below user-defined thresholds.
  The oscillator’s actual value (distance from equilibrium).
  
 
   Dual-Zone Output :
 
  Upper histogram = probability of downward mean reversion.
  Lower histogram = probability of upward mean reversion.
  
 
   Historical Extremes : The dashboard highlights the recent maximum probability values for both upward and downward scenarios.
  
 
 🔵 FEATURES 
 
   Oscillator Choice : Switch between RSI, MFI, and Stochastic.
   Customizable Zones : User-defined upper/lower thresholds with independent colors.
   Probability Histograms :
 
  Above oscillator → down reversion probability.
  Below oscillator → up reversion probability.
 
   Colored Gradient Zones on Chart : Visual overlays showing where mean reversion probabilities are strongest.
  
   Probability Labels : Percentages displayed next to histogram values for clarity.
  
   Dashboard : Compact table in the corner showing the  recent maximum probabilities  for both upward and downward mean reversion.
   Overlay Compatibility : Works in both chart pane and sub-pane with oscillators.
 
 🔵 HOW TO USE 
 
   Set Oscillator : Choose RSI, MFI, or Stochastic depending on your strategy style.
   Adjust Zones : Define upper/lower bounds for when oscillator values indicate strong overbought/oversold conditions.
   Interpret Histograms :
  Orange (upper) histogram → higher chance of a pullback/downward mean reversion.
  Green (lower) histogram → higher chance of upward reversion/bounce.
   Watch Gradient Zones : On the main chart, shaded areas highlight where probability of mean reversion is elevated.
  
   Consult Dashboard : Use the “Recent MAX” values to understand how strong recent reversion probabilities have been in either direction.
   Confluence Strategy : Combine with support/resistance, order flow, or trend filters to avoid counter-trend trades.
 
 🔵 CONCLUSION 
The  Mean Reversion Probability Zones   provides traders with an advanced way to quantify and visualize mean reversion opportunities. By blending oscillator momentum, threshold logic, and probability calculations, it highlights when markets are statistically stretched and primed for reversal. Whether you are a contrarian trader or simply looking for exhaustion signals to fade, this tool helps bring structure and clarity to mean reversion setups.
Oscylatory
Pairs Trading Scanner [BackQuant]Pairs Trading Scanner  
 What it is 
 This scanner analyzes the relationship between your  chart symbol  and a chosen  pair symbol  in real time. It builds a normalized “spread” between them, tracks how tightly they move together (correlation), converts the spread into a Z-Score (how far from typical it is), and then prints clear  LONG / SHORT / EXIT  prompts plus an at-a-glance dashboard with the numbers that matter.
 Why pairs at all? 
  
  Markets co-move. When two assets are statistically related, their relationship (the spread) tends to oscillate around a mean.
  Pairs trading doesn’t require calling overall market direction you trade the  relative mispricing  between two instruments.
  This scanner gives you a robust, visual way to find those dislocations, size their significance, and structure the trade.
  
 How it works (plain English) 
  
  Step 1   Pick a partner:  Select the  Pair Symbol  to compare against your chart symbol. The tool fetches synchronized prices for both.
  Step 2   Build a spread:  Choose a  Spread Method  that defines “relative value” (e.g., Log Spread, Price Ratio, Return Difference, Price Difference). Each lens highlights a different flavor of divergence.
  Step 3   Validate relationship:  A rolling  Correlation  checks if the pair is moving together enough to be tradable. If correlation is weak, the scanner stands down.
  Step 4   Standardize & score:  The spread is normalized (mean & variability over a lookback) to form a  Z-Score . Large absolute Z means “stretched,” small means “near fair.”
  Step 5   Signals:  When the Z-Score crosses user-defined thresholds  with sufficient correlation , entries print:
  LONG  = long chart symbol / short pair symbol,
  SHORT  = short chart symbol / long pair symbol,
  EXIT  = mean reversion into the exit zone or correlation failure.
  
 Core concepts (the three pillars) 
  
  Spread Method    Your definition of “distance” between the two series.
  Guidance: 
  
  Log Spread:  Focuses on proportional differences; robust when prices live on different scales.
  Price Ratio:  Classic relative value; good when you care about “X per Y.”
  Return Difference:  Emphasizes recent performance gaps; nimble for momentum-to-mean plays.
  Price Difference:  Straight subtraction; intuitive for similar-scale assets (e.g., two ETFs).
  
  Correlation    A rolling score of co-movement. The scanner requires it to be above your  Min Correlation  before acting, so you’re not trading random divergence.
  Z-Score    “How abnormal is today’s spread?” Positive = chart richer than pair; negative = cheaper. Thresholds define entries/exits with transparent, statistical context.
  
 What you’ll see on the chart 
  
  Correlation plot  (blue line) with a dashed  Min Correlation  guide. Above the line = green zone for signals; below = hands off.
  Z-Score plot  (white line) with colored, dashed  Entry  bands and dotted  Exit  bands. Zero line for mean.
  Normalized spread  (yellow) for a quick “shape read” of recent divergence swings.
  Signal markers :
  LONG  (green label) when Z < –Entry and corr OK,
  SHORT  (red label) when Z > +Entry and corr OK,
  EXIT  (gray label) when Z returns inside the Exit band or correlation drops below the floor.
  Background tint  for active state (faint green for long-spread stance, faint red for short-spread stance).
  
 The two built-in dashboards 
  Statistics Table (top-right) 
  
  Pair Symbol    Your chosen partner.
  Correlation    Live value vs. your minimum.
  Z-Score    How stretched the spread is now.
  Current / Pair Prices    Real-time anchors.
  Signal State    NEUTRAL / LONG / SHORT.
  Price Ratio    Context for ratio-style setups.
  
 Analysis Table (bottom-right) 
  
  Avg Correlation    Typical co-movement level over your window.
  Max |Z|    The recent extremes of dislocation.
  Spread Volatility    How “lively” the spread has been.
  Trade Signal    A human-readable prompt (e.g., “LONG A / SHORT B” or “NO TRADE” / “LOW CORRELATION”).
  Risk Level    LOW / MEDIUM / HIGH based on current stretch (absolute Z).
  
 Signals logic (plain English) 
  
  Entry (LONG):  The spread is unusually negative (chart cheaper vs pair)  and  correlation is healthy. Expect mean reversion upward in the spread: long chart, short pair.
  Entry (SHORT):  The spread is unusually positive (chart richer vs pair)  and  correlation is healthy. Expect mean reversion downward in the spread: short chart, long pair.
  Exit:  The spread relaxes back toward normal (inside your exit band), or correlation deteriorates (relationship no longer trusted).
  
 A quick, repeatable workflow 
  
  1) Choose your pair  in context (same sector/theme or known macro link). Think: “Do these two plausibly co-move?”
  2) Pick a spread lens  that matches your narrative (ratio for relative value, returns for short-term performance gaps, etc.).
  3) Confirm correlation  is above your floor no corr, no trade.
  4) Wait for a stretch  (Z beyond Entry band) and a printed  LONG / SHORT .
  5) Manage to the mean  (EXIT band) or correlation failure; let the scanners’ state/labels keep you honest.
  
 Settings that matter (and why) 
  
  Spread Method    Defines the “mispricing” you care about.
  Correlation Period    Longer = steadier regime read, shorter = snappier to regime change.
  Z-Score Period    The window that defines “normal” for the spread; it sets the yardstick.
  Use Percentage Returns    Normalizes series when using return-based logic; keep on for mixed-scale assets.
  Entry / Exit Thresholds    Set your stretch and your target reversion zone. Wider entries = rarer but stronger signals.
  Minimum Correlation    The gatekeeper. Raising it favors quality over quantity.
  
 Choosing pairs (practical cheat sheet) 
  
  Same family:  two index ETFs, two oil-linked names, two gold miners, two L1 tokens.
  Hedge & proxy:  stock vs. sector ETF, BTC vs. BTC index, WTI vs. energy ETF.
  Cross-venue or cross-listing:  instruments that are functionally the same exposure but price differently intraday.
  
 Reading the cues like a pro 
  
  Divergence shape:  The yellow normalized spread helps you see rhythm fast spike and snap-back versus slow grind.
  Corr-first discipline:  Don’t fight the “Min Correlation” line. Good pairs trading starts with a relationship you can trust.
  Exit humility:  When Z re-centers, let the  EXIT  do its job. The edge is the journey to the mean, not overstaying it.
  
 Frequently asked (quick answers) 
  
  “Long/Short means what exactly?” 
  LONG  = long the chart symbol and short the pair symbol.
  SHORT  = short the chart symbol and long the pair symbol.
  “Do I need same price scales?”  No. The spread methods normalize in different ways; choose the one that fits your use case (log/ratio are great for mixed scales).
  “What if correlation falls mid-trade?”  The scanner will neutralize the state and print  EXIT . Relationship first; trade second.
  
 Field notes & patterns 
  
  Snap-back days:  After a one-sided session, return-difference spreads often flag cleaner intraday mean reversions.
  Macro rotations:  Ratio spreads shine during sector re-weights (e.g., value vs. growth ETFs); look for steady corr + elevated |Z|.
  Event bleed-through:  If one symbol reacts to news and its partner lags, Z often flags a high-quality, short-horizon re-centering.
  
 Display controls at a glance 
  
  Show Statistics Table    Live state & key numbers, top-right.
  Show Analysis Table    Context/risk read, bottom-right.
  Show Correlation / Spread / Z-Score    Toggle the sub-charts you want visible.
  Show Entry/Exit Signals    Turn markers on/off as needed.
  Coloring    Adjust Long/Short/Neutral and correlation line colors to match your theme.
  
 Alerts (ready to route to your workflow) 
  
  Pairs Long Entry    Z falls through the long threshold with correlation above minimum.
  Pairs Short Entry    Z rises through the short threshold with correlation above minimum.
  Pairs Trade Exit    Z returns to neutral or the relationship fails your correlation floor.
  Correlation Breakdown    Rolling correlation crosses your minimum; relationship caution.
  
 Final notes 
 The scanner is designed to keep you systematic: require relationship (correlation), quantify dislocation (Z-Score), act when stretched, stand down when it normalizes or the relationship degrades. It’s a full, visual loop for relative-value trading that stays out of your way when it should and gets loud only when the numbers line up.
Ross-Style Momentum — StudyRoss-Style Momentum — Study
This indicator is designed to identify high-probability breakout setups inspired by Ross Cameron’s momentum trading style. It combines multiple filters and confirmations to highlight strong long opportunities, while giving traders full control over visibility and thresholds.
Core Features:
Price Range Filter: Only signals when price is between a defined min/max range (ideal for small-cap momentum).
VWAP Alignment: Ensures trades are biased to the long side only when price is above VWAP (optional).
MACD Momentum Check: Requires a fresh MACD bullish crossover within a user-defined lookback.
RSI & ATR Filters: Prevents chasing overextended moves (RSI ceiling) and ignores low-volatility tickers (ATR floor).
Relative Volume (RVOL): Confirms unusual trading activity with minimum RVOL thresholds.
Breakout & Volume Spike: Detects flat-top/base breakouts with volume expansion.
Higher Lows Option: Optional requirement for a constructive higher-lows pattern before breakout.
Float Filter: User-provided float value to avoid large-float stocks if desired.
Visual Tools:
Optional VWAP, Base High/Low, and RVOL plots.
Long setup markers (green labels under qualifying bars).
Background highlight when all conditions align.
Real-time dashboard (top-right) showing pass/fail status of each filter.
Alerts:
Triggers an alert when a full long setup condition is met.
This study does not place trades; it is intended as a signal and confirmation tool for discretionary traders who want to visually validate Ross-style momentum breakout conditions.
Trend + Squeeze High VolatilityGood for High Volatility Stocks and Options
Trend and Squeeze High Volatility
Good For High Volatility Stocks and Options
Trend + Squeeze with Fast Flexible Transition ESGood for ES. 
Trend and Squeeze with Fast Flexible Transition 
Good for ES.
Katz Calypso Indicator (Refactored)Overview
The Katz Calypso Indicator is a comprehensive momentum oscillator designed to identify potential entry and exit points in the market. At its core, it uses the True Strength Index (TSI) to gauge the strength and direction of a trend. To enhance signal accuracy and reduce false positives, the indicator integrates several optional filters, including the Waddah Attar Explosion, an EMA filter, and an ATR filter. It also provides an optional RVGI-based exit signal system.
This tool is designed to provide a clear, visual representation of market momentum, with customizable filters to adapt to various trading styles and market conditions.
How to Use the Indicator
The indicator is displayed in a separate pane below the main price chart.
TSI Line (Blue): This is the main oscillator line. Its position relative to the zero line indicates the overall trend bias (above 0 is bullish, below is bearish).
Signal Line (Red): A moving average of the TSI line. Crossovers between the TSI and Signal Line are the primary triggers for trade signals.
Zero Line: The centerline of the oscillator. A cross of the Zero Line can indicate a significant shift in momentum.
Overbought/Oversold Levels: These user-defined levels (defaulting to 65 and -65) help identify potential exhaustion points in a trend, which can be used for taking profits.
On-Chart Signals: The indicator plots shapes directly on the chart to make signals easy to spot:
Green Triangles (Up): Indicate long entry or continuation signals.
Red Triangles (Down): Indicate short entry or continuation signals.
Yellow Triangles: Suggest taking profits.
Maroon/Lime Triangles: Indicate an exit based on a signal cross (like RVGI or the Zero Line).
Trading Rules
Long Trade Rules
Entry: A long trade is signaled when ALL of the following conditions are met:
The blue TSI Line crosses above the red Signal Line.
The blue TSI Line is above the 0 Zero Line.
All enabled filters (Waddah Attar, EMA, ATR) confirm bullish conditions.
A green triangle labeled "Long" will appear below the price.
Exit (Take Profit): A take-profit signal for a long trade is generated when either of these occurs:
The TSI Line crosses below the Overbought level.
The TSI Line crosses back below the Signal Line while still above zero.
A yellow triangle labeled "TPL" (Take Profit Long) will appear above the price.
Exit (Stop/Reverse): A signal to exit a long trade is generated when either of these occurs:
The TSI Line crosses below the 0 Zero Line.
The RVGI Exit filter is enabled and generates a bearish crossover signal.
A maroon triangle labeled "Exit Long" will appear above the price.
Short Trade Rules
Entry: A short trade is signaled when ALL of the following conditions are met:
The blue TSI Line crosses below the red Signal Line.
The blue TSI Line is below the 0 Zero Line.
All enabled filters (Waddah Attar, EMA, ATR) confirm bearish conditions.
A red triangle labeled "Short" will appear above the price.
Exit (Take Profit): A take-profit signal for a short trade is generated when either of these occurs:
The TSI Line crosses above the Oversold level.
The TSI Line crosses back above the Signal Line while still below zero.
A yellow triangle labeled "TPS" (Take Profit Short) will appear below the price.
Exit (Stop/Reverse): A signal to exit a short trade is generated when either of these occurs:
The TSI Line crosses above the 0 Zero Line.
The RVGI Exit filter is enabled and generates a bullish crossover signal.
A lime green triangle labeled "Exit Short" will appear below the price.
Optional Filters
You can enable or disable these filters in the indicator's settings to fine-tune its sensitivity.
Waddah Attar Explosion Filter: This filter measures trend strength and volatility. When enabled, it ensures that entries are only taken during periods of strong, confirmed momentum, helping to avoid sideways or choppy markets.
EMA Price Filter: A classic trend filter. When enabled, it will only allow long entries if the price is above the specified Exponential Moving Average and short entries only if the price is below it.
ATR Filter: This acts as a volatility-based filter to prevent chasing a move. It helps ensure that you are not entering a long trade when the price has already moved too far above its EMA, or vice-versa for a short trade.
RVGI Exit Filter: The Relative Vigor Index (RVGI) is used here exclusively as an exit signal. When enabled, a crossover of the RVGI and its signal line can provide an earlier exit signal before the TSI crosses the zero line, potentially locking in profits sooner.
Disclaimer: This indicator is provided for educational and informational purposes only. It is not financial advice. Trading carries a high level of risk, and you can lose more than your initial investment. You should use this indicator at your own risk and discretion. Always conduct your own research and consider your risk tolerance before making any trading decisions.
FlowSpike ES — BB • RSI • VWAP + AVWAP + News MuteThis indicator is purpose-built for E-mini S&P 500 (ES) futures traders, combining volatility bands, momentum filters, and session-anchored levels into a streamlined tool for intraday execution.
Key Features:
	•	ES-Tuned Presets
Automatically optimized settings for scalping (1–2m), daytrading (5m), and swing trading (15–60m) timeframes.
	•	Bollinger Band & RSI Signals
Entry signals trigger only at statistically significant extremes, with RSI filters to reduce false moves.
	•	VWAP & Anchored VWAPs
Session VWAP plus anchored VWAPs (RTH open, weekly, monthly, and custom) provide high-confidence reference levels used by professional order-flow traders.
	•	Volatility Filter (ATR in ticks)
Ensures signals are only shown when the ES is moving enough to offer tradable edges.
	•	News-Time Mute
Suppresses signals around scheduled economic releases (customizable windows in ET), helping traders avoid whipsaw conditions.
	•	Clean Alerts
Long/short alerts are generated only when all conditions align, with optional bar-close confirmation.
Why It’s Tailored for ES Futures:
	•	Designed around ES tick size (0.25) and volatility structure.
	•	Session settings respect RTH hours (09:30–16:00 ET), the period where most liquidity and institutional flows concentrate.
	•	ATR thresholds and RSI bands are pre-tuned for ES market behavior, reducing the need for manual optimization.
⸻
This is not a generic indicator—it’s a futures-focused tool created to align with the way ES trades day after day. Whether you scalp the open, manage intraday swings, or align to weekly/monthly anchored flows, FlowSpike ES gives you a clear, rules-based signal framework.
Simplified Wave Trend Overbought/OversoldThis is just a variation of the popular wave trend that I find to be nicer to look at. 
BioSwarm Imprinter™BioSwarm Imprinter™ — Agent-Based Consensus for Traders
What it is
BioSwarm Imprinter™ is a non-repainting, agent-based sentiment oscillator. It fuses many short-to-medium lookback “opinions” into one 0–100 consensus line that is easy to read at a glance (50 = neutral, >55 bullish bias, <45 bearish bias). The engine borrows from swarm intelligence: many simple voters (agents) adapt their influence over time based on how well they’ve been predicting price, so the crowd gets smarter as conditions change.
Use it to:
	•	Detect emerging trends sooner without overreacting to noise.
	•	Filter mean-reversion vs continuation opportunities.
	•	Gate entries with a confidence score that reflects both strength and persistence of the move.
	•	Combine with your execution tools (VWAP/ORB/levels) as a state filter rather than a trade signal by itself.
⸻
Why it’s different
	•	Swarm learning: Each agent improves or decays its “fitness” depending on whether its vote matched the next bar’s direction. High-fitness agents matter more; weak agents fade.
	•	Multi-horizon by design: The crowd is composed of fixed, simple lookbacks spread from lenMin to lenMax. You get a blended, robust view instead of a single fragile parameter.
	•	Two complementary lenses: Each agent evaluates RSI-style balance (via Wilder’s RMA) and momentum (EMA deviation). You decide the weight of each.
	•	No repaint, no MTF pitfalls: Everything runs on the chart’s timeframe with bar-close confirmation; no request.security() or forward references.
	•	Actionable UI: A clean consensus line, optional regime background, confidence heat, and triangle markers when thresholds are crossed.
⸻
What you see on the chart
	•	Consensus line (0–100): Smoothed to your preference; color/area makes bull/bear zones obvious.
	•	Regime coloring (optional): Light green in bull zone, light red in bear zone; neutral otherwise.
	•	Confidence heat: A small gauge/number (0–100) that combines distance from neutral and recent persistence.
	•	Markers (optional): Triangles when consensus crosses up through your bull threshold (e.g., 55) or down through your bear threshold (e.g., 45).
	•	Info panel (optional): Consensus value, regime, confidence, number of agents, and basic diagnostics.
⸻
How it works (under the hood)
	1.	Horizon bins: The range   is divided into numBins. Each bin has a fixed, simple integer length (crucial for Pine’s safety rules).
	2.	Per-bin features (computed every bar):
	•	RSI-style balance using Wilder’s RMA (not ta.rsi()), then mapped to −1…+1.
	•	Momentum as (close − EMA(L)) / EMA(L) (dimensionless drift).
	3.	Agent vote: For its assigned bin, an agent forms a weighted score: score = wRSI*RSI_like + wMOM*Momentum. A small dead-band near zero suppresses chop; votes are +1/−1/0.
	4.	Fitness update (bar close): If the agent’s previous vote agreed with the next bar’s direction, multiply its fitness by learnGain; otherwise by learnPain. Fitness is clamped so it never explodes or dies.
	5.	Consensus: Weighted average of all votes using fitness as weights → map to 0–100 and smooth with EMA.
Why it doesn’t repaint:
	•	No future references, no MTF resampling, fitness updates only on confirmed bars.
	•	All TA primitives (RMA/EMA/deltas) are computed every bar unconditionally.
⸻
Signals & confidence
	•	Bullish bias: consensus ≥ bullThr (e.g., 55).
	•	Bearish bias: consensus ≤ bearThr (e.g., 45).
	•	Confidence (0–100):
	•	Distance score: how far consensus is from 50.
	•	Momentum score: how strong the recent change is versus its recent average.
	•	Combined into a single gate; start filtering entries at ≥60 for higher quality.
Tip: For range sessions, raise thresholds (60/40) and increase smoothing; for momentum sessions, lower smoothing and keep thresholds at 55/45.
⸻
Inputs you’ll actually tune
	•	Agents & horizons:
	•	N_agents (e.g., 64–128)
	•	lenMin / lenMax (e.g., 6–30 intraday, 10–60 swing)
	•	numBins (e.g., 12–24)
	•	Weights & smoothing:
	•	wRSI vs wMOM (e.g., 0.7/0.3 for FX & indices; 0.6/0.4 for crypto)
	•	deadBand (0.03–0.08)
	•	consSmooth (3–8)
	•	Thresholds & hygiene:
	•	bullThr/bearThr (55/45 default)
	•	cooldownBars to avoid signal spam
⸻
Playbooks (ready-to-use)
1) Breakout / Trend continuation
	•	Timeframe: 15m–1h for day/swing.
	•	Filter: Take longs only when consensus > 55 and confidence ≥ 60.
	•	Execution: Use your ORB/VWAP/pullback trigger for entry. Trail with swing lows or 1.5×ATR. Exit on a close back under 50 or when a bearish signal prints.
2) Mean reversion (fade)
	•	When: Sideways days or low-volatility clusters.
	•	Setup: Increase deadBand and consSmooth.
	•	Signal: Bearish fades when consensus rolls over below ≈55 but stays above 50; bullish fades when it rolls up above ≈45 but stays below 50.
	•	Targets: The neutral zone (~50) as the first take-profit.
3) Multi-TF alignment
	•	Keep BioSwarm on 1H for bias, execute on 5–15m:
	•	Only take entries in the direction of the 1H consensus.
	•	Skip counter-bias scalps unless confidence is very low (explicit mean-reversion plan).
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Integrations that work
	•	DynamoSent Pro+ (macro bias): Only act when macro bias and swarm consensus agree.
	•	ORB + Session VWAP Pro: Trade London/NY ORB breakouts that retest while consensus >55 (long) or <45 (short).
	•	Levels/Orderflow: BioSwarm is your “go / no-go”; execution stays with your usual triggers.
⸻
Quick start
	1.	Drop the indicator on a 1H chart.
	2.	Start with: N_agents=64, lenMin=6, lenMax=30, numBins=16, deadBand=0.06, consSmooth=5, thresholds 55/45.
	3.	Trade only when confidence ≥ 60.
	4.	Add your favorite execution tool (VWAP/levels/OR) for entries & exits.
⸻
Non-repainting & safety notes
	•	No request.security(); no hidden lookahead.
	•	Bar-close confirmation for fitness and signals.
	•	All TA calls are unconditional (no “sometimes called” warnings).
	•	No series-length inputs to RSI/EMA — we use RMA/EMA formulas that accept fixed simple ints per bin.
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Known limits & tips
	•	Too many signals? Raise deadBand, increase consSmooth, widen thresholds to 60/40.
	•	Too few signals? Lower deadBand, reduce consSmooth, narrow thresholds to 53/47.
	•	Over-fitting risk: Keep learnGain/learnPain modest (e.g., ×1.04 / ×0.96).
	•	Compute load: Large N_agents × numBins is heavier; scale to your device.
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Example recipes
EURUSD 1H (swing):
lenMin=8, lenMax=34, numBins=16, wRSI=0.7, wMOM=0.3, deadBand=0.06, consSmooth=6, thr=55/45
Buy breakouts when consensus >55 and confidence ≥60; confirm with 5–15m pullback to VWAP or level.
SPY 15m (US session):
lenMin=6, lenMax=24, numBins=12, consSmooth=4, deadBand=0.05
On trend days, stay with longs as long as consensus >55; add on shallow pullbacks.
BTC 1H (24/7):
Increase momentum weight: wRSI=0.6, wMOM=0.4, extend lenMax to ~50. Use dynamic stops (ATR) and partials on strong verticals.
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Final word
BioSwarm is a state engine: it tells you when the market is primed to continue or mean-revert. Pair it with your entries and risk framework to turn that state into trades. If you’d like, I can supply a companion strategy template that consumes the consensus and back-tests the three playbooks (Breakout/Fade/Flip) with standard risk management.
VWAP + Multi-Timeframe RSI StrategyThis strategy combines VWAP trend direction with confirmation from RSI on a higher timeframe. The idea is to only take trades when both intraday momentum and higher-timeframe trend are aligned, increasing accuracy.
LONG Entry:
Price above VWAP (bullish environment).
RSI on the current timeframe is below overbought (room to rise).
RSI on the higher timeframe (default H1) is above 50 (bullish confirmation).
SHORT Entry:
Price below VWAP (bearish environment).
RSI on the current timeframe is above oversold (room to fall).
RSI on the higher timeframe is below 50 (bearish confirmation).
Exit Rule:
Stop-loss near VWAP.
Take-profit at ~2x risk or when major levels are reached.
Best Timeframes:
Use 15m or 30m chart with H1 RSI for intraday trading.
Use 1H chart with Daily RSI for swing trading.
⚡ The higher-timeframe RSI filter reduces false signals and aligns trades with institutional flow.
VWAP Pullback + RSI ConfirmationThis strategy focuses on trend continuation entries. Instead of betting on reversions, it looks for opportunities when price pulls back to VWAP but the dominant trend remains intact.
Trend Bias:
Price above VWAP = bullish environment → look for BUY pullbacks.
Price below VWAP = bearish environment → look for SELL pullbacks.
Entry Logic:
BUY: Price pulls back near VWAP, RSI stays above oversold (momentum intact).
SELL: Price pulls back near VWAP, RSI stays below overbought (momentum intact).
Exit Rule:
Stop-loss just below/above VWAP.
Take-profit at 1.5–2x risk (default script uses ~2%).
Best Timeframes:
15m–1H → good for intraday trend-following setups.
Daily → captures stronger, longer trends.
⚡ This strategy is powerful in trending markets because VWAP acts as a "magnet" for pullbacks, while RSI prevents overbought/oversold traps.
VWAP + RSI Strategytesting this method, based on RSI combine with Vwap 
there is a buy and sell alert, if you like pls comment it, this is a simple method that can surely adapt to any assets, 
Slingshot System By Dusty InvestmentsSlingshot System by Dusty Investments
What it is
 
  A trend-following pullback system designed to time entries inside an established trend using a two-EMA “cloud” plus a Stochastic-RSI K oscillator.
  It's the improved version of this script: 
 
It plots:
 
     An EMA cloud (trend and pullback filter)
     Long/Short setup markers
     “TAKE PROFIT” markers based on the oscillator
 
Core building blocks
 
  Trend filter (EMA Cloud)
 
      Fast EMA vs Slow EMA
      Uptrend: Fast EMA > Slow EMA
      Downtrend: Fast EMA < Slow EMA
      The area between the two EMAs is filled (the “cloud”).
 
 
 
  Cloud touch
 
      The system requires price to touch/pierce the cloud with a small tolerance (configurable) to qualify a pullback.
 
 
 
  Oscillator
 
      K is a smoothed Stochastic of RSI (StochRSI K).
      Oversold/Overbought levels default to 20/80, with a small tolerance kTol to avoid edge flicker.
 
 
Long logic (pullbacks within uptrend)
 
  Purpose: Catch a second, “higher” dip during an uptrend.
  Steps:
 
      Candidate V1: While in uptrend, if K ≤ Oversold and price touches the EMA cloud, a V1 candidate is stored (the first dip).
      Deal lock: When K later reaches ≥ Overbought in uptrend, the last V1 candidate is “locked in” as V1 for this cycle.
      V2 search: After the lock, if another pullback appears (still in uptrend, K ≤ Oversold, price touching the cloud) and the low stays strictly above V1’s low, the script starts searching for the best V2 low (the lowest low of this second dip that remains above V1’s low).
      Long signal: When K exits the oversold area, if a valid V2 was found above V1’s low, the indicator places a LONG label at that V2 low.
      Take profit for Long: The “TAKE PROFIT” marker is shown when K crosses up through the Overbought level (≥ 80 by default).
 
 
Short logic (pullbacks within downtrend)
 
  Purpose: Catch lower‑high pullbacks during a downtrend. The workflow is explicit and labeled:
 
      D1 (first anchor): In downtrend, when price touches the cloud and K ≥ Overbought, mark D1 (the first high).
      Valley: The first time K reaches ≤ Oversold after D1.
      D2 (setup high): After the valley, the first bar that again touches the cloud with K ≥ Overbought and makes a strict Lower High vs D1 becomes D2. This opens a “window.”
      Signal (live): From D2 until confirmation, the Signal marker follows the most recent swing high that forms on downtrend bars. It never tracks uptrend bars.
      Confirmation: The first time K reaches ≤ Oversold after D2, the Signal is fixed at the last tracked high. From here the system waits for TP.
      Take profit for Short: The “TAKE PROFIT” marker is shown when K crosses back above the Overbought level (≥ 80 by default).
      Chaining (New D1): At TP, the prior D2 is promoted to “New D1,” allowing the next cycle to form if conditions repeat (D1 → Valley → D2).
 
 
What the labels mean
 
  LONG: A validated long setup at the V2 low (second dip above the first dip’s low) within an uptrend.
  SHORT: The live Short entry marker that moves to the latest downtrend swing high between D2 and confirmation; it gets fixed when K hits ≤ Oversold.
  TAKE PROFIT: Suggestive exit markers tied to the K oscillator (Long TP when K crosses up 80; Short TP when K crosses up 80 after a Short confirmation).
 
Strict constraints baked in
 
  No signals against the trend
  Fast EMA / Slow EMA periods (trend and cloud)
  RSI period for the StochRSI, Stochastic period, and K smoothing
  Oversold/Overbought levels (defaults 20/80)
  Cloud touch tolerance (percent)
  kTol: tolerance around 20/80 thresholds for K
 
How to use it
 
  Pick your market and use the  4H timeframe  since you get the best results this way.
  Trade with the trend:
 
      Uptrend: Watch for LONG markers (V1 then V2 higher‑low behavior).
      Downtrend: Watch the D1 → Valley → D2 sequence. The Signal marker appears after D2 and is fixed at confirmation; TP comes on K > 80.
 
  Calibrate touchTolPct and kTol per symbol/timeframe to match how tightly you want to require cloud touches and K thresholds.
  Risk management is up to you. The indicator outputs entries and TP suggestions; it does not set stops.
 
Notes
 
  Signals confirm at bar close. During a Short window, the live Signal may move to newer downtrend highs; once confirmed, it becomes fixed.
  The LONG side is symmetrical in spirit (pullback‑then‑higher‑low in uptrend), but naming uses V1/V2 instead of D1/D2.
 
Fear Greed zones and Money Waves FusedThis indicator, named "Fear Greed zones and Money Waves" combines a smoothed Money Flow Index (MFI)-based wave and the Relative Strength Index (RSI) to visualize market sentiment through fear and greed zones and generate buy/sell signals.
Core Functions
- It calculates a zero-centered and smoothed version of the MFI (MoneyWave) using configurable smoothing methods (SMA, EMA, RMA) with parameters for length and smoothing intensity.
- It uses RSI to define fear and greed zones based on user-defined thresholds (e.g., RSI below 30 indicates fear, above 70 indicates greed).
- The MoneyWave area is color-coded based on these fear/greed RSI zones: dark green for fear, dark red for greed, and yellow neutral.
- The edge line of the MoneyWave shows bullish (lime) when above zero and bearish (red) when below zero.
Visual Elements
- Plots the MoneyWave as a colored area with an edge line.
- Displays horizontal lines representing the zero line and upper/lower bounds derived from MFI thresholds.
- Optionally shows direction change arrows when the MoneyWave sign changes and labels indicating BUY or SELL signals based on MoneyWave crossing zero combined with fear/greed conditions.
Trading Signals and Alerts
- Buy signal triggers when MoneyWave crosses upward through zero while in the fear zone (RSI low).
- Sell signal triggers when MoneyWave crosses downward through zero while in the greed zone (RSI high).
- Alerts can be generated for these buy/sell events.
In summary, this indicator provides a combined measure of money flow momentum (MoneyWave) with market sentiment zones (fear and greed from RSI), helping identify potential market entry and exit points with visual markers and alerts  .
Hybrid RSI Strategy [Heifereum ]This is a hybrid script that combines visual RSI indicator signals with an optional backtestable trading strategy.
BUY Entry: When RSI crosses above the oversold level (default 30)
SELL Exit: When RSI crosses below the overbought level (default 70)
Timeframe: Works best on trending assets (crypto, forex, indices) in 5min to 1H
Backtest Toggle: Turn ON/OFF live testing using the Enable Backtest Mode? setting
Visual Cues: Buy/Sell labels, background coloring, and alerts ready for webhook automation
Use this strategy to visually explore RSI dynamics, run performance backtests, or hook up to external bots via alerts.
DynamoSent DynamoSent Pro+ — Professional Listing (Preview)
— Adaptive Macro Sentiment (v6) 
— Export, Adaptive Lookback, Confidence, Boxes, Heatmap + Dynamic OB/OS
Preview / Experimental build. I’m actively refining this tool—your feedback is gold.
If you spot edge cases, want new presets, or have market-specific ideas, please comment or DM me on TradingView.
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What it is
DynamoSent Pro+ is an adaptive, non-repainting macro sentiment engine that compresses VIX, DXY and a price-based activity proxy (e.g., SPX/sector ETF/your symbol) into a 0–100 sentiment line. It scales context by volatility (ATR%) and can self-calibrate with rolling quantile OB/OS. On top of that, it adds confidence scoring, a plain-English Context Coach, MTF agreement, exportable sentiment for other indicators, and a clean Light/Dark UI.
Why it’s different
	•	Adaptive lookback tracks regime changes: when volatility rises, we lengthen context; when it falls, we shorten—less whipsaw, more relevance.
	•	Dynamic OB/OS (quantiles) self-calibrates to each instrument’s distribution—no arbitrary 30/70 lines.
	•	MTF agreement + Confidence gate reduce false positives by highlighting alignment across timeframes.
	•	Exportable output: hidden plot “DynamoSent Export” can be selected as input.source in your other Pine scripts.
	•	Non-repainting rigor: all request.security() calls use lookahead_off + gaps_on; signals wait for bar close.
Key visuals
	•	Sentiment line (0–100), OB/OS zones (static or dynamic), optional TF1/TF2 overlays.
	•	Regime boxes (Overbought / Oversold / Neutral) that update live without repaint.
	•	Info Panel with confidence heat, regime, trend arrow, MTF readout, and Coach sentence.
	•	Session heat (Asia/EU/US) to match intraday behavior.
	•	Light/Dark theme switch in Inputs (auto-contrasted labels & headers).
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How to use (examples & recipes)
1) EURUSD (swing / intraday blend)
	•	Preset: EURUSD 1H Swing
	•	Chart: 1H; TF1=1H, TF2=4H (default).
	•	Proxies: Defaults work (VIX=D, DXY=60, Proxy=D).
	•	Dynamic OB/OS: ON at 20/80; Confidence ≥ 55–60.
	•	Playbook:
	•	When sentiment crosses above 50 + margin with Δ ≥ signalK and MTF agreement ≥ 0.5, treat as trend breakout.
	•	In Oversold with rising Coach & TF agreement, take fade longs back toward mid-range.
	•	Alerts: Enable Breakout Long/Short and Fade; keep cooldown 8–12 bars.
2) SPY (daytrading)
	•	Preset: SPY 15m Daytrade; Chart: 15m.
	•	VIX (D) matters more; preset weights already favor it.
	•	Start with static 30/70; later try dynamic 25/75 for adaptive thresholds.
	•	Use Coach: in US session, when it says “Overbought + MTF agree → sell rallies / chase breakouts”, lean momentum-continuation after pullbacks.
3) BTCUSD (crypto, 24/7)
	•	Preset: BTCUSD 1H; Chart: 1H.
	•	DXY and BTC.D inform macro tone; keep Carry-forward ON to bridge sparse ticks.
	•	Prefer Dynamic OB/OS (15/85) for wider swings.
	•	Fade signals on weekend chop; Breakout when Confidence > 60 and MTF ≥ 1.0.
4) XAUUSD (gold, macro blend)
	•	Preset: XAUUSD 4H; Chart: 4H.
	•	Weights tilt to DXY and US10Y (handled by preset).
	•	Coach + MTF helps separate trend legs from news pops.
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Best practices
	•	Theme: Switch Light/Dark in Inputs; the panel adapts contrast automatically.
	•	Export: In another script → Source → DynamoSent Pro+ → DynamoSent Export. Build your own filters/strategies atop the same sentiment.
	•	Dynamic vs Static OB/OS:
	•	Static 30/70: fast, universal baseline.
	•	Dynamic (quantiles): instrument-aware; use 20/80 (default) or 15/85 for choppy markets.
	•	Confidence gate: Start at 50–60% to filter noise; raise when you want only A-grade setups.
	•	Adaptive Lookback: Keep ON. For ultra-liquid indices, you can switch it OFF and set a fixed lookback.
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Non-repainting & safety notes
	•	All request.security() calls use lookahead=barmerge.lookahead_off and gaps=barmerge.gaps_on.
	•	No forward references; signals & regime flips are confirmed on bar close.
	•	History-dependent funcs (ta.change, ta.percentile_linear_interpolation, etc.) are computed each bar (not conditionally).
	•	Adaptive lookback is clamped ≥ 1 to avoid lowest/highest errors.
	•	Missing-data warning triggers only when all proxies are NA for a streak; carry-forward can bridge small gaps without repaint.
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Known limits & tips
	•	If a proxy symbol isn’t available on your plan/exchange, you’ll see the NA warning: choose a different symbol via Symbol Search, or keep Carry-forward ON (it defaults to neutral where needed).
	•	Intraday VIX is sparse—using Daily is intentional.
	•	Dynamic OB/OS needs enough history (see dynLenFloor). On short histories it gracefully falls back to static levels.
Thanks for trying the preview. Your comments drive the roadmap—presets, new proxies, extra alerts, and integrations.
RSI Embedded v2.21 / TradingArt3dThe "RSI Embedded in Price Candles" indicator is an innovative tool that uses the Relative Strength Index (RSI) to apply a dynamic color gradient directly on top of the chart's candles. It overlays the main price chart, allowing traders to quickly identify changes in market momentum without needing a separate RSI panel.
Key Features:
Candle color gradient: Each candle's color changes gradually, transitioning from a bullish to a bearish color based on the RSI value.
Price overlay: This indicator appears directly on the main price chart, visualizing the RSI's momentum on the candles themselves.
No repainting: This indicator is "non-repainting," meaning a candle's color is fixed once it closes, providing a reliable visualization.
Customizable: You can adjust the RSI period, the gradient colors, and the range of RSI values that trigger the gradient.
Simple and effective: It provides a quick view of market momentum directly on the price action, eliminating the need to switch between different panels.
User Settings (Inputs):
Gradient Range: Defines the calculation period for the RSI. A higher value smooths the gradient.
Bullish Gradient Color: Choose the color for the bullish part of the gradient, applied when the RSI rises.
Bearish Gradient Color: Choose the color for the bearish part of the gradient, applied when the RSI falls.
Minimum Range Value: The lower RSI value that marks the beginning of the color gradient.
Maximum Range Value: The upper RSI value that marks the end of the color gradient.
Data Source: Select the data source (e.g., close, open, high, low) to calculate the RSI.
// **********************************************************************l
El indicador "RSI Incrustado en las Velas de Precio" es una herramienta innovadora que utiliza el valor del Índice de Fuerza Relativa (RSI) para aplicar un degradado de color dinámico directamente sobre las velas del gráfico. Se superpone al gráfico de precios principal, permitiendo a los traders identificar rápidamente los cambios en el impulso del mercado sin necesidad de un panel de RSI separado.
Características clave:
Gradiente de color en las velas: El color de cada vela cambia gradualmente, pasando de un color alcista a uno bajista, según el valor del RSI.
Superposición en el precio: Este indicador aparece directamente en el gráfico principal, visualizando el impulso del RSI sobre las propias velas.
Sin repintado: Este indicador es "no repintado", lo que significa que el color de una vela se fija una vez que se cierra, proporcionando una visualización fiable.
Personalizable: Puedes ajustar el período del RSI, los colores del gradiente y el rango de valores del RSI que activan el degradado.
Simple y eficaz: Proporciona una visión rápida del impulso del mercado directamente en la acción del precio.
Configuración de usuario (Entradas):
Rango del Degradado: Define el período de cálculo del RSI. Un valor más alto suaviza el gradiente.
Color del Gradiente Alcista: Elige el color que se usará cuando el RSI muestre impulso alcista.
Color del Gradiente Bajista: Elige el color que se usará cuando el RSI muestre impulso bajista.
Valor Mínimo del Rango: El valor del RSI que marca el comienzo del gradiente.
Valor Máximo del Rango: El valor del RSI que marca el final del gradiente.
Fuente de Datos: Selecciona la fuente de precio (cierre, apertura, etc.) para el cálculo del RSI.
Entry Signals (Long/Short)The indicator visualizes precise entry signals for long and short setups directly on the price chart. Long is marked with a green triangle-up, short with a red triangle-down. To contextualize trend structure, the Fast EMA (5) is plotted in black and the Slow EMA (20) in blue (line width 1). Signals print only at bar close for reproducible execution. Applicable across all timeframes—ideal for top-down analysis from the 195-minute chart through daily to weekly.
ARO Pro — Adaptive Regime OscillatorARO Pro — Adaptive Regime Oscillator (v6)
ARO Pro turns your chart into a context-aware decision system. It classifies every bar as Trending (up or down) or Ranging in real time, then switches its math to match the regime: trend strength is measured with an ATR-normalized EMA spread, while range behavior is tracked with a center-based RSI oscillator. The result is cleaner entries, fewer false signals, and faster reads on regime shifts—without repainting.
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How it works (under the hood)
	
1.	Regime Detection (Kaufman ER):
ARO computes Kaufman’s Efficiency Ratio (ER) over a user-defined length.
- ER > threshold → Trending (direction from EMA fast vs. EMA slow)
- ER ≤ threshold → Ranging
	
2.	Adaptive Oscillator Core:
- Trend mode: (EMA(fast) − EMA(slow)) / ATR * 100 → momentum normalized by volatility.
- Range mode: RSI(length) − 50 → mean-reversion pressure around zero.
	
3.	Volatility Filter (optional):
Blocks signals if ATR as % of price is below a floor you set. This reduces noise in thin or quiet markets.
	
4.	MTF Trend Filter (optional & non-repainting):
Confirms signals only if a higher timeframe EMA(fast) > EMA(slow) for longs (or < for shorts). Implemented with lookahead_off and gaps_on.
	
5.	Confirmation & Alerts:
Signals are locked only on bar close (barstate.isconfirmed) and offered via three alert types: ARO Long, ARO Short, ARO Regime Shift.
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What you see on the chart
	•	Background heat:
	•	Green = Trending Up, Red = Trending Down, Gray = Range.
	•	ARO line (panel): Adaptive oscillator (trend/value colors).
	•	Signal markers: ▲ Long / ▼ Short on confirmed bars.
	•	Guide lines: Upper/Lower thresholds (±K) and zero line.
	•	Info Panel (table): Regime, ER, ATR %, ARO, HTF status (OK/BLOCK/OFF), and a Confidence light.
	•	Debug Overlay (optional): Quick view of thresholds and raw conditions for tuning.
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Inputs (quick reference)
	•	Signals: Fast/Slow EMA, RSI length, ER length & threshold, oscillator smoothing, signal threshold.
	•	Filters: ATR length, minimum ATR% (volatility floor), toggle for volatility filter.
	•	Visuals: Background on/off, Info Panel on/off, Debug overlay on/off.
	•	MTF (safe): Toggle + HTF timeframe (e.g., 240, D, W).
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Interpreting signals
	•	Long: Trend regime AND fast EMA > slow EMA AND ARO ≥ +threshold (confirmed bar, filters passing).
	•	Short: Trend regime AND fast EMA < slow EMA AND ARO ≤ −threshold (confirmed bar, filters passing).
	•	Regime Shift: Alert when ER moves the market from Range → Trend or flips trend direction.
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Practical use cases & examples
1) Intraday momentum alignment (scalps to day trades)
	•	Timeframes: 5–15m with HTF filter = 4H.
	•	Flow:
	1.	Wait for Trend Up background + HTF OK.
	2.	Enter on ▲ Long when ARO crosses above +threshold.
	3.	Stops: 1–1.5× ATR(14) below trigger bar or below last micro swing.
	4.	Exits: Partial at 1× ATR, trail remainder with an ATR stop or when ARO reverts to zero/Regime Shift.
	•	Why it works: You’re trading with the dominant higher-timeframe structure while avoiding low-volatility fakeouts.
2) Swing trend following (cleaner trend legs)
	•	Timeframes: 1H–4H with HTF filter = 1D.
	•	Flow:
	1.	Only act in Trend background aligned with HTF.
	2.	Add on subsequent ▲ signals as ARO maintains positive (or negative) territory.
	3.	Reduce or exit on Regime Shift (Trend → Range or direction flip) or when ARO crosses back through zero.
	•	Stops/targets: Initial 1.5–2× ATR; move to breakeven once the trade gains 1× ATR; trail with a multiple-ATR or structure lows/highs.
3) Range tactics (fade the extremes)
	•	Timeframes: 15m–1H or 1D on mean-reverting names.
	•	Flow:
	1.	Act only when background = Range.
	2.	Fade moves when ARO swings from ±extremes back toward zero near well-defined S/R.
	3.	Exit at the opposite band or zero line; abort if a Regime Shift to Trend occurs.
	•	Tip: Increase ER threshold (e.g., 0.35–0.40) to label more bars as Range on choppy instruments.
4) Event days & macro filters
	•	Approach: Raise the volatility floor (Min ATR%) on macro days (FOMC, CPI).
	•	Effect: You’ll ignore “fake” micro swings in the minutes leading up to releases and catch only post-event confirmed momentum.
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Parameter tuning guide
	•	ER Threshold:
	•	Lower (0.20–0.30) = more Trend bars, more signals, higher noise.
	•	Higher (0.35–0.45) = stricter trend confirmation, fewer but cleaner signals.
	•	Signal Threshold (±K):
	•	Raise to reduce whipsaws; lower for earlier but noisier triggers.
	•	Volatility Floor (ATR%):
	•	Thin/quiet assets benefit from a higher floor (e.g., 0.3–0.6).
	•	Highly liquid futures/forex can work with lower floors.
	•	HTF Filter:
	•	Keep it ON when you want higher win consistency; turn OFF for tactical counter-trend plays.
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Alerts (recommended setup)
	•	“ARO Long” / “ARO Short”: Entry-style alerts on confirmed signals.
	•	“ARO Regime Shift”: Context alert to scale in/out or switch playbooks (trend vs. range).
All alerts are non-repainting and fire only when the bar closes.
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Best practices & combinations
	•	Price action & S/R: Use ARO to define when to engage, and price structure to define where (breakout levels, pullback zones).
	•	VWAP/Session tools: In intraday trends, ▲ signals above VWAP tend to carry; avoid shorts below session VWAP in strong downtrends.
	•	Risk first: Size by ATR; never let a single ARO event override your max risk per trade.
	•	Portfolio filter: On indices/ETFs, enable HTF filter and a stricter ER threshold to ride regime legs.
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Non-repaint and implementation notes
	•	The script does not repaint:
	•	Signals are computed and locked on bar close (barstate.isconfirmed).
	•	All higher-timeframe data uses request.security(..., lookahead_off, gaps_on).
	•	No future indexing or negative offsets are used.
	•	The Info Panel and Debug overlay are purely visual aids and do not change signal logic.
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Limitations & tips
	•	Chop sensitivity: In hyper-choppy symbols, consider raising ER threshold and the signal threshold, and enable HTF filter.
	•	Instrument personality: EMAs/RSI lengths and volatility floor often need a quick 2–3 minute tune per asset class (FX vs. crypto vs. equities).
	•	No guarantees: ARO improves context and timing, but it is not a promise of profitability—always combine with risk management.
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Quick start (TL;DR)
	1.	Timeframes: 5–15m intraday (HTF = 4H); 1H–4H swing (HTF = 1D).
	2.	Use defaults, then tune ER threshold (0.25–0.40) and Signal threshold (±20).
	3.	Enable Volatility Floor (e.g., 0.2–0.5 ATR%) on quiet assets.
	4.	Trade ▲ / ▼ only in matching Trend background; fade extremes only in Range background.
	5.	Set alerts for Long, Short, and Regime Shift; manage risk with ATR stops.
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Author’s note: ARO Pro is designed to be clear, adaptive, and operational out of the box. If you publish variants (e.g., different ER logic, alternative trend cores), please credit the original and document any changes so users can compare behavior reliably.
Stochastic Divergence MarkerThis script marks all the times the price movement moves contradictory to the Stochastic. This usually shows a change in momentum and thus a possible reversal.
Linear Regression Momentum | Lyro RSLinear Regression Momentum | Lyro RS 
 Overview 
This indicator is built around linear regression momentum, with additional layers of smoothing, valuation bands, and adaptive visualization. Its purpose is to provide traders with structured perspectives on market momentum by combining linear regression analysis, standard deviation thresholds, and versatile display modes. It integrates multiple approaches to highlight not only directional bias but also valuation extremes and potential reversals.
  
 Originality 
At its core, the script calculates momentum from a chosen source and then applies linear regression to extract slope-based information. This slope is smoothed through user-selected moving averages and used as the central momentum curve. Around this core, standard deviation bands are constructed, enabling detection of overbought and oversold zones relative to the momentum slope. The indicator offers three operational modes: Trend, which classifies directional bias based on slope relative to a dynamic midline; Valuation, which evaluates whether momentum is extended toward extremes; and Reversals, which identifies potential turning points when slope and price action diverge. Each mode is supported by visual cues, colored candles, standard deviation envelopes, and a configurable table summarizing active states.
In terms of originality, this script distinguishes itself by unifying linear regression momentum with Heikin Ashi transformations, customizable standard deviation envelopes, and multi-mode logic within one framework. Rather than providing a single fixed interpretation, it allows the user to adaptively switch between momentum-driven trend following, valuation-based overextension analysis, and reversal detection. This modularity is combined with flexible display features, custom color palettes, and integrated alert conditions, enabling a single tool to serve different trading approaches without the need for multiple overlapping indicators.
 Key Features 
The script offers a wide range of inputs for customization.
 
 Momentum settings include source selection, momentum length, linear regression length, moving average type, and smoothing length, which together define the sensitivity and smoothness of the momentum calculation.
 Standard deviation band settings allow users to choose whether zero or a dynamic midline is used, as well as the lookback length and the multiplier for band scaling, controlling the width of the envelope.
 Display settings enable switching between Heikin Ashi and Classic visualizations, as well as selecting the operating mode (Trend, Valuation, or Reversals). Users can also define the color palette through predefined themes or fully custom bullish and bearish colors.
 Table settings control whether a status table is shown, its size, and its position on the chart. An overlay option is available if users prefer table placement over existing chart elements.
 Additional visualization features include dynamic bar coloring, Heikin Ashi-based slope representation, standard deviation bands with shaded fills, and plotshapes highlighting reversal or overextension signals. Alerts are integrated for each mode, allowing traders to receive notifications when long or short conditions are identified under trend, valuation, or reversal logic.
 
 Summary 
In summary, this indicator provides a structured framework for analyzing momentum through linear regression, enhanced with volatility envelopes and adaptive display logic. Its design emphasizes flexibility, enabling traders to view the same momentum data through different analytical lenses—trend continuation, valuation extremes, or reversals—while maintaining clear visualization and optional alerts for actionable decision support.
 ⚠️Disclaimer 
This indicator is a tool for technical analysis and does not provide guaranteed results. It should be used in conjunction with other analysis methods and proper risk management practices. The creators of this indicator are not responsible for any financial decisions made based on its signals.
Sling Shot System By LorinThis script uses the Sling Shot System to draw a cloud of Fast EMA of 38 and Slow EMA of 62, a cloud where most of the pullbacks go to. Together with the Stochastic RSI it draws long and short signals:
1. Longs: 
 
 when the RSI is bellow 20.
 when the candle has touched the cloud on close.
 when the price is forming a higher low, meaning its higher then the last time these conditions were met.
 when the price is the uptrend, meaning the cloud is green.
 
2. Shorts: 
 
 when the RSI is above 80.
 when the candle has touched the cloud on close.
 when the price is forming a lower low, meaning its lower then the last time these conditions were met.
 when the price is in the downtrend, meaning the cloud is red.
RSI/Stochastic with overlays a moving average + Bollinger BandsCompact oscillator panel that lets you switch the base between RSI and Stochastic %K, then overlays a moving average + Bollinger Bands on the oscillator values (not on price) to read momentum strength and squeeze/expansion.
What’s added
Selectable base: RSI ↔ Stochastic %K (plots %D when Stoch is chosen).
MA + BB on oscillator to gauge momentum trend (MA) and volatility (bands).
Adjustable bands 70/50/30 with optional fill, plus optional regular divergence and alerts.
How to read
Bull bias: %K above osc-MA and pushing/closing near Upper BB; confirm with %K > %D.
Bear bias: %K below osc-MA and near Lower BB; confirm with %K < %D.
Squeeze: BB on oscillator tightens → expect momentum breakout.
Overextension: repeated touches of Upper/Lower BB in 70/30 zones → strong trend; watch for %K–%D recross.
Quick settings (start here)
Stoch: 14 / 3 / 3; Bands: 70/50/30.
Osc-MA: EMA 14.
BB on oscillator: StdDev 2.0 (tune 1.5–2.5).
Note
Analysis tool, not financial advice. Backtest across timeframes and use risk management.






















