🔸 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!
סקריפט קוד פתוח
ברוח TradingView אמיתית, היוצר של הסקריפט הזה הפך אותו לקוד פתוח, כך שסוחרים יכולים לבדוק ולאמת את הפונקציונליות שלו. כל הכבוד למחבר! למרות שאתה יכול להשתמש בו בחינם, זכור שפרסום מחדש של הקוד כפוף לכללי הבית שלנו.
לגישה מהירה לגרף, הוסף את הסקריפט הזה למועדפים שלך - למד עוד כאן.
המידע והפרסומים אינם אמורים להיות, ואינם מהווים, עצות פיננסיות, השקעות, מסחר או סוגים אחרים של עצות או המלצות שסופקו או מאושרים על ידי TradingView. קרא עוד בתנאים וההגבלות.
ברוח TradingView אמיתית, היוצר של הסקריפט הזה הפך אותו לקוד פתוח, כך שסוחרים יכולים לבדוק ולאמת את הפונקציונליות שלו. כל הכבוד למחבר! למרות שאתה יכול להשתמש בו בחינם, זכור שפרסום מחדש של הקוד כפוף לכללי הבית שלנו.
לגישה מהירה לגרף, הוסף את הסקריפט הזה למועדפים שלך - למד עוד כאן.
המידע והפרסומים אינם אמורים להיות, ואינם מהווים, עצות פיננסיות, השקעות, מסחר או סוגים אחרים של עצות או המלצות שסופקו או מאושרים על ידי TradingView. קרא עוד בתנאים וההגבלות.