G-Channel Trend DetectionHere we are demonstrating a different approach to trend analysis using AlexGrover's G-Channel. Using this method of trend detection, we will consider the asset bullish if it breaks through the upward bounds of the channel at any time, and consider it bearish once it breaks downwards.
We have also simplified coloring: If we're in an uptrend, we're only drawing from the upwards part of the channel to the midline. And if we're in a downtrend we're only drawing from the downward part of the channel to the midline.
Created by AlexGrover
ค้นหาในสคริปต์สำหรับ "trend"
ANN RSI SUPER TRENDSo I was bored and I made this Hybrid
ANN taken from
and alex super trend ,
instead of normal ATR for the supertrend I use RSI and the ANN combination
alerts included
wave trend mtf v1This Lazy Bear wave trend in MTF version with take profit and stop loss rebuy
you can change the MTF using the security call
and many nice option to see insid3e
so you can play with it, modify it or make it better
Super trend VPTSo this is Hybrid of VPT and Super trend
buy and sell with alerts included (red and green cross)
Super trend OscilatorSo what is this ?
This is a super trend just look different
the entery and exit of the regular super trend that we all know are mark by blue cross =entry, red cross= exit
the oscillator entry point are marked by blue and red circles
in this way we can enter more early and exit more early as we can use combination of either to find best spots
alerts included for each
super trend 50So how this super trend is different?
answer is simple =instead to use the source as close we use modified sma at length of 50 (length of curve)
by this way we can make it to act little different
the rest is just to find best setting for each case
alerts inside
Super Trend 3Super Trend 3 Strategy migrates the version 2 script to a version 3 script to eliminate repainting.
Linear Regression Trend bandscode from linear regression used
So it just to make bands from it
uptrend blue color , down trend red color
I suggest you try to fix length to best optimum ( I put it on 200, but other length may be better)
Pivot trend pivots taken from
the system is based on cross up or down of the trend line of weekly pivot point
exit is by % 3.5 and 15% (you can change it to your liking
rebuy at 15% loss
this is sill crude system so user need to refine setting to make it work best for him
Oko's Trend MA'sFirstly, thanks to Dejabrew for his great video on finding trend viua MA's, it is his YT video which taught me which ma's to use for this, checkhim out: Dejabrewtrading on YT
200ma, 72ma, 12ma
Best with 1d and 4h
for a 100% confirmed bullish uptrend look for:-
a) price above all 3 ma's
b) from bottom to top in the order: 200, 72,12
Moving Averages - Cross / Trend 5 x Moving Averages that will show you trend bias for a coin ( green bull / yellow undecides / red bearish )
high/low MA-trend - JDShort script for trend indication taking a moving average of the highs and the lows seperately.
Lookback period for the highs/lows can be altered.
Ema length can be altered.
JD.
Noro's Trend SMA Strategy v1.3Trade strategy which uses only 2 SMA .
The slow SMA (blue) is used for definition of a trend
The fast SMA (red) is used for an entrance to the transaction
Recomended:
For H1
For crypto/fiat
Fast SMA Period = 5
Slow SMA Period = 20
In the new version 1.3
- priceChannel
In the new version 1.2
- profit became more
- the risk became less
- strategy waits for 2 candles of lonely color
Noro's Trend SMA Strategy v1.2Trade strategy which uses only 2 SMA .
The slow SMA (blue) is used for definition of a trend
The fast SMA (red) is used for an entrance to the transaction
Recomended:
For H1
For crypto/fiat
Fast SMA Period = 5
Slow SMA Period = 30
In the new version 1.2
- profit became more
- the risk became less
- strategy waits for 2 candles of lonely color
Noro's Trend SMA Strategy v1.1Trade strategy which uses only 2 SMA .
The slow SMA (blue) is used for definition of a trend
The fast SMA (red) is used for an entrance to the transaction
For H1
For crypto/fiat
In the new version 1.1
- profit became more
- the risk became less
- strategy considers color of a candle
Noro's Trend SMA StrategyTrade strategy which uses only 2 SMA.
The slow SMA (blue) is used for definition of a trend
The fast SMA (red) is used for an entrance to the transaction
For H1
SILA trend indicator v1.0My new indicator "SILA 1.0".
BestMA + BarColor + WOW = SILA 1.0 (3 in 1)
For:
1MN, 1W, 1D
Any pair
Background:
lime background = uptrend
red background = downtrend
NA color background = 50/50
Lines
0 lines = no trend
1 upper line = weak downtrend
2 upper lines = normal downtrend
3 upper lines = strong downtrend
1 lower lines = weak uptrend
2 lower lines = normal uptrend
3 lower lines = strong uptrend
AK_ TREND ID AS A STRATEGY : FOR EDUCATIONAL PURPOSES ONLYJust converted the AK_ TREND ID into a strategy , to show the efficiency of this simple indicator. I used SPX in this example, to display that the indicator has been accurate for a long time.
Auto TrendLines [TradingFinder] Support Resistance Signal Alerts🔵 Introduction
The trendline is one of the most essential tools in technical analysis, widely used in financial markets such as Forex, cryptocurrency, and stocks. A trendline is a straight line that connects swing highs or swing lows and visually indicates the market’s trend direction.
Traders use trendlines to identify price structure, the strength of buyers and sellers, dynamic support and resistance zones, and optimal entry and exit points.
In technical analysis, trendlines are typically classified into three categories: uptrend lines (drawn by connecting higher lows), downtrend lines (formed by connecting lower highs), and sideways trends (moving horizontally). A valid trendline usually requires at least three confirmed touchpoints to be considered reliable for trading decisions.
Trendlines can serve as the foundation for a variety of trading strategies, such as the trendline bounce strategy, valid breakout setups, and confluence-based analysis with other tools like candlestick patterns, divergences, moving averages, and Fibonacci levels.
Additionally, trendlines are categorized into internal and external, and further into major and minor levels, each serving unique roles in market structure analysis.
🔵 How to Use
Trendlines are a key component in technical analysis, used to identify market direction, define dynamic support and resistance zones, highlight strategic entry and exit points, and manage risk. For a trendline to be reliable, it must be drawn based on structural principles—not by simply connecting two arbitrary points.
🟣 Selecting Pivot Types Based on Trend Direction
The first step is to determine the market trend: uptrend, downtrend, or sideways.
Then, choose pivot points that match the trend type :
In an uptrend, trendlines are drawn by connecting low pivots, especially higher lows.
In a downtrend, trendlines are formed by connecting high pivots, specifically lower highs.
It is crucial to connect pivots of the same type and structure to ensure the trendline is valid and analytically sound.
🟣 Pivot Classification
This indicator automatically classifies pivot points into two categories :
Major Pivots :
MLL : Major Lower Low
MHL : Major Higher Low
MHH : Major Higher High
MLH : Major Lower High
These define the primary structure of the market and are typically used in broader structural analysis.
Minor Pivots :
mLL: minor Lower Low
mHL: minor Higher Low
mHH: minor Higher High
mLH: minor Lower High
These are used for drawing more precise trendlines within corrective waves or internal price movements.
Example : In a downtrend, drawing a trendline from an MHH to an mHH creates structural inconsistency and introduces noise. Instead, connect points like MHL to MHL or mLH to mLH for a valid trendline.
🟣 Drawing High-Precision Trendlines
To ensure a reliable trendline :
Use pivots of the same classification (Major with Major or Minor with Minor).
Ensure at least three valid contact points (three touches = structural confirmation).
Draw through candles with the least deviation (choose wicks or bodies based on confluence).
Preferably draw from right to left for better alignment with current market behavior.
Use parallel lines to turn a single trendline into a trendline zone, if needed.
🟣 Using Trendlines for Trade Entries
Bounce Entry: When price approaches the trendline and shows signs of reversal (e.g., a reversal candle, divergence, or support/resistance), enter in the direction of the trend with a logical stop-loss.
Breakout Entry: When price breaks through the trendline with strong momentum and a confirmation (such as a retest or break of structure), consider trading in the direction of the breakout.
🟣 Trendline-Based Risk Management
For bounce entries, the stop-loss is placed below the trendline or the last pivot low (in an uptrend).
For breakout entries, the stop-loss is set behind the breakout candle or the last structural level.
A broken trendline can also act as an exit signal from a trade.
🟣 Combining Trendlines with Other Tools (Confluence)
Trendlines gain much more strength when used alongside other analytical tools :
Horizontal support and resistance levels
Moving averages (such as EMA 50 or EMA 200)
Fibonacci retracement zones
Candlestick patterns (e.g., Engulfing, Pin Bar)
RSI or MACD divergences
Market structure breaks (BoS / ChoCH)
🔵 Settings
Pivot Period : This defines how sensitive the pivot detection is. A higher number means the algorithm will identify more significant pivot points, resulting in longer-term trendlines.
Alerts
Alert :
Enable or disable the entire alert system
Set a custom alert name
Choose how often alerts trigger (every time, once per bar, or on bar close)
Select the time zone for alert timestamps (e.g., UTC)
Each trendline type supports two alert types :
Break Alert : Triggered when price breaks the trendline
React Alert : Triggered when price reacts or bounces off the trendline
These alerts can be independently enabled or disabled for all trendline categories (Major/Minor, Internal/External, Up/Down).
Display :
For each of the eight trendline types, you can control :
Whether to show or hide the line
Whether to delete the previous line when a new one is drawn
Color, line style (solid, dashed, dotted), extension direction (e.g., right only), and width
Major lines are typically thicker and more opaque, while minor lines appear thinner and more transparent.
All settings are designed to give the user full control over the appearance, behavior, and alert system of the indicator, without requiring manual drawing or adjustments.
🔵 Conclusion
A trendline is more than just a line on the chart—it is a structural, strategic, and flexible tool in technical analysis that can serve as the foundation for understanding price behavior and making trading decisions. Whether in trending markets or during corrections, trendlines help traders identify market direction, key zones, and high-potential entry and exit points with precision.
The accuracy and effectiveness of a trendline depend on using structurally valid pivot points and adhering to proper market logic, rather than relying on guesswork or personal bias.
This indicator is built to solve that exact problem. It automatically detects and draws multiple types of trendlines based on actual price structure, separating them into Major/Minor and Internal/External categories, and respecting professional analytical principles such as pivot type, trend direction, and structural location.
Dynamic Touch Trendlines [QuantVue]The Dynamic Touch Trendlines (DTT) indicator automatically draws and manages trendlines on your chart, helping traders identify key support and resistance levels.
What sets the DTT indicator apart from other trendline indicators is its ability to let traders customize the number of touches required to validate a trendline. This flexibility allows you to fine-tune the indicator for different markets or trading styles, ensuring only strong trendlines with the specified number of touches are considered valid.
This indicator features both uptrend lines (drawn from pivot lows) and downtrend lines (drawn from pivot highs), making it suitable for detecting bullish and bearish trends.
An uptrend line connects three (default setting) or more significant lows, showing where price has historically found support. Traders often look for price to bounce off this line during pullbacks in an uptrend.
When price breaks below an uptrend line, it suggests a weakening of the bullish trend. This could mean that buyers are losing strength, and the market may be transitioning into a bearish phase, providing a potential opportunity for traders to enter short positions or exit long positions.
Conversely, a downtrend line connects three (default setting) or more significant highs, indicating potential resistance in a downtrend. Price action below this line can signal continued bearish momentum.
When price breaks above a downtrend line, it indicates a potential reversal of the bearish trend. This can signal the end of selling pressure and the beginning of a new bullish phase, offering traders a potential opportunity to enter long positions.
Key settings:
Minimum Touches: This sets the number of price touches required to validate a trendline. Increasing the minimum touches filters out weaker trends, ensuring that only more reliable trendlines are drawn.
Buffer: The buffer is used to account for minor price overshoots or near misses relative to the trendline. It creates a margin around the trendline, allowing price to come close to the line—whether it overshoots slightly or falls just short—and still count as a valid touch. This helps ensure that small price fluctuations or market noise don’t prevent valid trendline touches from being recognized, making the trendlines more reliable.
Trendline Break Source: Allows traders to define how a trendline is considered broken—either based on the close of the price bar or the wicks (highs and lows) of the price action.
The DTT indicator also features alerts whenever a new trendline is detected or an existing trendline is broken!
TrendLine Toolkit w/ Breaks (Real-Time)The TrendLine Toolkit script introduces an innovating capability by extending the conventional use of trendlines beyond price action to include oscillators and other technical indicators. This tool allows traders to automatically detect and display trendlines on any TradingView built-in oscillator or community-built script, offering a versatile approach to trend analysis. With breakout detection and real-time alerts, this script enhances the way traders interpret trends in various indicators.
🔲 Methodology
Trendlines are a fundamental tool in technical analysis used to identify and visualize the direction and strength of a price trend. They are drawn by connecting two or more significant points on a price chart, typically the highs or lows of consecutive price movements (pivots).
Drawing Trendlines:
Uptrend Line - Connects a series of higher lows. It signals an upward price trend.
Downtrend Line - Connects a series of lower highs. It indicates a downward price trend.
Support and Resistance:
Support Line - A trendline drawn under rising prices, indicating a level where buying interest is historically strong.
Resistance Line - A trendline drawn above falling prices, showing a level where selling interest historically prevails.
Identification of Trends:
Uptrend - Prices making higher highs and higher lows.
Downtrend - Prices making lower highs and lower lows.
Sideways (or Range-bound) - Prices moving within a horizontal range.
A trendline helps confirm the existence and direction of a trend, providing guidance in aligning with the prevailing market sentiment. Additionally, they are usually paired with breakout analysis, a breakout occurs when the price breaches a trendline. This signals a potential change in trend direction or an acceleration of the existing trend.
The script adapts this methodology to oscillators and other indicators. Instead of relying on price pivots, which can only be detected in retrospect, the script utilizes a trailing stop on the oscillator to identify potential swings in real-time, you may find more info about it here (SuperTrend toolkit) . We detect swings or pivots simply by testing for crosses between the indicator and its trailing stop.
type oscillator
float o = Oscillator Value
float s = Trailing Stop Value
oscillator osc = oscillator.new()
bool l = ta.crossunder(osc.o, osc.s) => Utilized as a formed high
bool h = ta.crossover (osc.o, osc.s) => Utilized as a formed low
This approach enables the algorithm to detect trendlines between consecutive pivot highs or lows on the oscillator itself, providing a dynamic and immediate representation of trend dynamics.
🔲 Breakout Detection
The script goes beyond trendline creation by incorporating breakout detection directly within the oscillator. After identifying a trendline, the algorithm continuously monitors the oscillator for potential breakouts, signaling shifts in market sentiment.
🔲 Setup Guide
A simple example on one of my public scripts, Z-Score Heikin-Ashi Transformed
🔲 Settings
Source - Choose an oscillator source of which to base the Toolkit on.
Zeroing - The Mid-Line value of the oscillator, for example RSI & MFI use 50.
Sensitivity - Calibrates the Sensitivity of which TrendLines are detected, higher values result in more detections.
🔲 Alerts
Bearish TrendLine
Bullish TrendLine
Bearish Breakout
Bullish Breakout
As well as the option to trigger 'any alert' call.
By integrating trendline analysis into oscillators, this Toolkit enhances the capabilities of technical analysis, bringing a dynamic and comprehensive approach to identifying trends, support/resistance levels, and breakout signals across various indicators.