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@tradegeek oh okay, are you using a tick chart or 1 min? and do you leave your hull length @ 20?
Also is this the swing high lo indicator you were referring to?
Also is this the swing high lo indicator you were referring to?
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@tradegeek oh okay, are you using a tick chart or 1 min? and do you leave your hull length @ 20?
Also is this the swing high lo indicator you were referring to?
Hello, I played around with the settings to line it up perfect with the chart, look at the results on attached screenshotWell, I'm embarrassed to say that it seems I can't locate the original version of the lower script. I can try to recreate it, but you'll know it if you find one that uses a displace function.
Perhaps someone in the community at large still has it.
Is this what you are looking for? @goofy @mashumeHello, I played around with the settings to line it up perfect with the chart, look at the results on attached screenshot
Cant figure out setting for lower code, currently set to 55.. Upper code is set 1- lookback, 1- HMA length for 15 in chart.. Any suggestion to make lower code to work with it cant figure out hma lenght to use in 15 min
Please look at the charts below:
NVDA
TSLA
NVM really liking the script..thank you for the awesome work
I have hma length set at 1 .. It overlays perfectly with daily 15 minchart. Is it bad to have hma length set at 1?
AssignPriceColor(if concavity[1] == -1 then
if HMA > HMA[1] then color.dark_orange else color.red
else
if HMA < HMA[1] then color.dark_green else color.green);
Please excuse as i have changed the name to be top of my list and i have same name on my study.AB_UpperCode_Mashume("hma length" = 21)."buy" is true within 1 bars
How do you get the arrows, I dont see them on chartAs I was looking at the Hull Moving Average, it occurred to me that taking the local minimums and maximums might not be the most effective use of it's smooth nature. Nor did it seem that a moving average cross over would provide timely signals.
And then I remembered that I used to teach physics and calculus and decided to look at rates of change and that lead me to...
CONCAVITY
which is nothing but the second derivative of the function (if you remember or not) and so this indicator was born.
It is in two parts -- the upper which is the Hull Moving Average with the addition of colored segments representing concavity and turning points: maxima, minima and inflection. The last of these are of the greatest interest. The second part is a plot of the calculation used in finding the turning points (which is roughly the second derivative of the HMA function, where zero crosses are the inflection points.
UPPER INDICATOR
Upper HMA colors:
- Green: Concave Up but HMA decreasing. The 'mood' has changed and the declining trend of the HMA is slowing. Long trades were entered at the turning point
- Light Green: Concave up and HMA increasing. Price is increasing, and since the curve is still concave up, it is accelerating upward.
- Orange: Concavity is now downward, and though price is still increasing, the rate has slowed, perhaps the mood has become less enthusiastic. We EXIT the trade (long) when this phase starts. Very little additional upward price movement is likely.
- Red: Concave down and HMA decreasing. Not good for long trades, but get ready for a turning point to enter long on again.
Upper Label Colors:
these are useful for getting ready to enter a trade, or exit a trade and serve as warnings that a turning point may be reached soon
Arrows are provided as Buy and Sell and could perhaps be scanned against.
- Green: Concave up and divergence (the distance from the expected HMA value to the actual HMA value is increasing). That is, we're moving away from a 2nd derivative zero crossover.
- Yellow: Concave up but the divergence is decreasing (heading toward a 2nd derivative zero crossover); it may soon be time to exit the trade.
- Red: Concave down and the absolute value of the divergence is increasing (moving away from crossover)
- Pink: Concave down but approaching a zero crossover from below (remember that that is the entry signal, so pink means 'get ready').
LOWER INDICATOR
For those who prefer less cluttered uppers, I offer the plot of the divergence from expected HMA values; analogous to the second derivative in that the zero crossovers are of interest, as is the slope of the line. The further from zero, the stronger the curve of the concavity, and the more likely to reach a local minima or maxima in short order.
Miscelaneous
If you find that there are too many buy and sell signals, you can change the length of the HMA (I find 34 a happy medium, though 55 and sometimes 89 can be appropriate). You can also play with the value of the lookback, though that will slow down signals.
This works well on Daily timeframes as well as intraday candles.
I set it up with High + Low / 2 as the default so that it shouldn't wait for close prices. That may not be appropriate to how you wish to trade.
Comments welcome. Let me know how you use it, how it works for your trades, and whether it made your head hurt trying to remember your calculus.
Happy Trading,
Mashume
UPPER:
https://tos.mx/cgKFdmm
LOWER:
https://tos.mx/p0k7ims
UPPER CODE
Code:# # Hull Moving Average Concavity and Turning Points # or # The Second Derivative of the Hull Moving Average # # Author: Seth Urion (Mahsume) # Version: 2020-02-23 V3 # Faster, but not necessarily mathematically as good as the first # # This code is licensed (as applicable) under the GPL v3 # # ---------------------- declare upper; input price = HL2; input HMA_Length = 21; input lookback = 2; plot HMA = HullMovingAvg(price = price, length = HMA_Length); # def delta_per_bar = # (fold n = 0 to lookback with s do s + getValue(HMA, n, lookback - 1)) / lookback; def delta = HMA[1] - HMA[lookback + 1]; def delta_per_bar = delta / lookback; def next_bar = HMA[1] + delta_per_bar; def concavity = if HMA > next_bar then 1 else -1; plot turning_point = if concavity[1] != concavity then HMA else double.nan; HMA.AssignValueColor(color = if concavity[1] == -1 then if HMA > HMA[1] then color.dark_orange else color.red else if HMA < HMA[1] then color.dark_green else color.green); HMA.SetLineWeight(3); turning_point.SetLineWeight(4); turning_point.SetPaintingStrategy(paintingStrategy = PaintingStrategy.POINTS); turning_point.SetDefaultColor(color.white); plot MA_Max = if HMA[-1] < HMA and HMA > HMA[1] then HMA else Double.NaN; MA_Max.SetDefaultColor(Color.WHITE); MA_Max.SetPaintingStrategy(PaintingStrategy.SQUARES); ##### # Added Alerts 2020-02-23 Alert(condition = buy, text = "Buy", "alert type" = Alert.BAR, sound = Sound.Chimes); Alert(condition = sell, text = "Sell", "alert type" = Alert.BAR, sound = Sound.Chimes);
LOWER CODE
Code:# # Hull Moving Average Concavity Divergence # or # The Second Derivative of the Hull Moving Average # # Author: Seth Urion (Mahsume) # Version: 2020-02-23 V3 # # This code is licensed (as applicable) under the GPL v3 # # ---------------------- declare lower; input price = OPEN; input HMA_length = 55; input lookback = 2; def HMA = HullMovingAvg(length = HMA_length, price = price); def delta = HMA[1] - HMA[lookback + 1]; def delta_per_bar = delta / lookback; def next_bar = HMA[1] + delta_per_bar; def concavity = if HMA > next_bar then 1 else -1; plot zero = 0; zero.setdefaultcolor(color.gray); zero.setpaintingstrategy(PaintingStrategy.DASHES); plot divergence = HMA - next_bar; divergence.setDefaultColor(Color.LIME); divergence.SetLineweight(2); plot cx_up = if divergence crosses above zero then 0 else double.nan; cx_up.SetPaintingStrategy(PaintingStrategy.POINTS); cx_up.SetDefaultColor(Color.LIGHT_GREEN); cx_up.SetLineWeight(4); plot cx_down = if divergence crosses below zero then 0 else double.nan; cx_down.SetPaintingStrategy(PaintingStrategy.POINTS); cx_down.SetDefaultColor(Color.RED); cx_down.SetLineWeight(4);
Add this to your upper study somewhere near the end:How do you get the arrows, I dont see them on chart
plot sell = if turning_point and concavity == 1 then high else double.nan;
sell.SetDefaultColor(Color.DARK_ORANGE);
sell.SetPaintingStrategy(PaintingStrategy.ARROW_DOWN);
sell.SetLineWeight(3);
plot buy = if turning_point and concavity == -1 then low else double.nan;
buy.SetDefaultColor(Color.CYAN);
buy.SetPaintingStrategy(PaintingStrategy.ARROW_UP);
buy.SetLineWeight(3);
Repainting is, unfortunately, a know issue with the way the calculations work. There are discussions of close vs hl2 elsewhere in this thread.Hey Hey! Thanks for this!
I've noticed sometimes the arrows paint on the screen live, then are removed later. Is there a way to catch the removal and paint it in another color on the screen so we can see when the script changes its mind?
Thanks again!
Repainting is, unfortunately, a know issue with the way the calculations work. There are discussions of close vs hl2 elsewhere in this thread.
mashume
I went back through the thread and saw that. Sorry for the redundant question.
Is there not a way to catch when the condition which painted the disappearing arrow is no longer true and paint the opposite arrow? I'm a developer by trade but new to thinkscript.
Is there a way to set a variable when the current plot is set to a particular direction? That way we could check the variable to see if the current plot (the last one that didnt disappear) is the same as the variable and repaint the current direction again. Does that make sense?
@mashume Thank you so much, can you add one just for the original Hull without the orange and dark green only 2 colors red and green. I would greatly appreciated.
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