Distance High-Low, Open-Close 8 DaysPinescript tables are a nice addition to the language. This one shows a complete distance from daily low to daily high and/or from the daily open to the daily close.
► You can show the distance between low and high
► You can show the distance between open and close
► Have this data for 8 last days
► Flip a table if you need to
I used the original TradingView's code in their news blog.
Have a nice day!
Tìm kiếm tập lệnh với " TABLE "
SPX 0dte Options TableSPX 0DTE Options Table Indicator 📊
Version: Pine Script v6
Description: A real-time table overlay for 0DTE SPX options, showing strikes, prices, and volumes for calls/puts. Perfect for intraday traders spotting high-volume opportunities!
Perfect for fast look up for options premium ( Real time data required $2/month)
Key Features
Dynamic Table: Displays current SPX price, call/put strikes (e.g., 5700C/5600P), last prices, and volumes in a clean overlay.
Custom Strikes: 1-15 per side (default: 8), with increments of 5+ (default: 10). Strikes rounded to multiples of 10.
Strike Offset: Fixed (default: 0) or dynamic based on remaining trading hours (US session: 9:30 AM-4:00 PM ET, e.g., 6+ hours = ±40).
SPX Handling: Fixed value (default: 6850) or dynamic from open (default: 60-min timeframe).
Data Fetch: OPRA tickers on last bar; customizable timeframe (default: 1-min).
Volume Alerts: Trigger on > threshold (default: 600) if price ≥$1. JSON alerts with ET timestamp.
Customization: Table position, colors, text size (tiny/small/normal/large).
Optimizations: Array-based; weekend-aware; real-time focus.
Limitations: Needs OPRA data access; no historicals; use fixed SPX to avoid open-update errors.
Full Currency Strength Table Dashboard (8 Currencies)
# Full Currency Strength Table Dashboard (8 Currencies) 📊
This indicator provides a **simplified, visual representation of the current relative strengths of 8 major global currencies** (EUR, USD, GBP, JPY, AUD, NZD, CAD, CHF). It's designed as a minimalist dashboard that appears discreetly on your chart, giving traders a quick and clear picture of forex pair movements.
The indicator calculates the relative strength of each currency based on its movement against the other 7 currencies in the panel, providing insight into which currencies are currently the strongest and which are the weakest.
## Key Features 🌟
* **Simplified Visualization:** Instead of showing currency strength as a line on the chart, which can often be distracting, the indicator uses a **data table (dashboard)** positioned on the chart. This ensures **maximum chart visibility** and cleanliness.
* **8 Major Currencies:** All major currencies are included ($A$ - EUR, $B$ - USD, $C$ - GBP, $D$ - JPY, $E$ - AUD, $F$ - NZD, $G$ - CAD, $H$ - CHF), allowing strength calculation based on **28 base currency pairs**.
* **Strength Calculation:** Strength is calculated based on the average percentage change $\left(\frac{\text{Close} - \text{Open}}{\text{Open}} \times 100\right)$ of the currency relative to all 7 other currencies.
* **Timeframe Setting:** Users can select a **higher timeframe (TF)** (e.g., Daily - 'D') for the strength calculation. This allows analysis of longer-term currency strength momentum, independent of the chart's current timeframe.
* **Customizable Design:** You can adjust the table's position, text size, the colour of each currency, and the resolution (length) of the strength meter.
## How to Use the Indicator (Interpretation) 💡
1. **Select a Timeframe (TF):** It's recommended to use a higher TF (e.g., Daily - 'D' or 4h - '240') to get more stable currency strength signals.
2. **The Dashboard Table:** The table displays:
* The currency name (bottom, with its corresponding colour).
* The numerical strength value (top, expressed in points or average change).
* The **Strength Meter (bar)** visually represents the currency's relative strength compared to the other currencies on the panel (calculated based on the Min/Max values across all 8 currencies).
3. **Making Decisions:**
* **Buy:** Look for a currency pair where the **Base Currency** is significantly **strong** (high positive value, long meter) and the **Quote Currency** is significantly **weak** (high negative value, short meter).
* **Sell:** Look for a currency pair where the **Base Currency** is significantly **weak** and the **Quote Currency** is significantly **strong**.
* **Avoid Trading:** Avoid pairs where both currencies have roughly the same strength or are close to zero.
## Note on Calculation and Code 🛠️
* **Base Pairs:** The script calculates 28 base currency pairs (e.g., EURUSD, EURGBP... CADCHF) using the `request.security` function to retrieve data from the selected timeframe (`freq`).
* **Data Correction:** A correction was implemented in the code by adding ` ` after `request.security` to always use the **CLOSED bar values** from the higher TF. This **eliminates NaN (Not a Number) data** that would appear when using the current bar.
* **Accumulation:** Accumulation (`sumA, sumB...`) only occurs when the selected higher TF changes (`timeframe.change(freq)`), effectively tracking the currency's relative strength during the formation of **one closed bar** on that higher TF.
### License
This work is licensed under the **Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)** license.
The original concept and code are based on the work of the **LuxAlgo** team and finalized to fix syntax errors and handle NaN data for stable use with 8 currencies.
---
**Questions or suggestions?** I'd love to hear your feedback in the comments! Happy trading! 📈
EMA/SMA Distance Percentage TableThis TradingView indicator, "EMA/SMA Distance Percentage Table," is designed to help traders and analysts quickly assess the current price's relationship to key Exponential Moving Averages (EMAs) and Simple Moving Averages (SMAs).
Here's a breakdown of what it does:
Calculates Multiple Moving Averages: It computes EMAs for lengths 10, 30, 50, and 200, and SMAs for lengths 50 and 200. These are commonly used moving averages in technical analysis.
Measures Percentage Distance: For each of these moving averages, it calculates the percentage difference between the current closing price and the moving average's value. This indicates how far, in percentage terms, the price has deviated from that average. A positive percentage means the price is above the MA, while a negative percentage means it's below.
Displays Data in a Table: All the calculated information (MA type and length, its current value, and the percentage distance) is presented in a clear, organized table on the chart. This allows for quick at-a-glance monitoring.
Customizable Visibility: Users have the flexibility to show or hide the plots of the EMAs and SMAs on the chart, as well as the entire data table, through the indicator's settings.
Purpose:
The primary purpose of this indicator is to provide a concise overview of price momentum and potential overbought/oversold conditions relative to various moving averages. Traders often use the distance from MAs to:
Identify Trend Strength: A large distance from a long-term MA might suggest a strong trend.
Spot Potential Reversals: If the price is significantly extended from an MA, it might indicate that a pullback or reversal is due.
Confirm Support/Resistance: Moving averages often act as dynamic support or resistance levels, and their distance can provide context.
In essence, it helps you quickly see if the price is "stretched" or "compressed" relative to its historical averages, which can be valuable for making trading decisions.
MFI Candles MTF TableMFI Candles + Multi-Timeframe Table | by julzALGO
This open-source script visualizes the Money Flow Index (MFI) in a new format — as candles instead of a traditional oscillator line. It provides a clean, volume-driven view of momentum and pressure, ideal for traders seeking more actionable and visual cues than a typical MFI plot.
What Makes It Unique:
• Plots "MFI Candles" — synthetic candles based on smoothed MFI values using a selected timeframe (default: 1D), giving a new way to read volume flow.
• Candles reflect momentum: green if MFI rises, red if it falls.
• Background turns red when MFI is overbought (≥ 80) or green when oversold (≤ 20).
Multi-Timeframe Strength Table:
• Displays MFI values from 15m, 1h, 4h, and 1D timeframes — all in one dashboard.
• Color-coded for quick recognition: 🔴 Overbought, 🟢 Oversold.
• Values are smoothed with linear regression for better clarity.
Custom Settings:
• MFI calculation length
• Smoothing factor
• Candle source timeframe
• Toggle table and OB/OS background
How to Use:
- Use MFI Candles to monitor momentum shifts based on money flow.
- Use the Multi-Timeframe Table to identify when multiple timeframes align — helpful for timing entries and exits.
- Watch the background for extreme conditions (OB/OS) that may signal upcoming reversals or pressure exhaustion.
Happy Trading!
Bias Bar Coloring + Multi-Timeframe Bias Table + AlertsMulti-Timeframe Bias Bar Coloring with Alerts & Table
This indicator provides a powerful, visual way to assess price action bias across multiple timeframes—Monthly, Weekly, and Daily—while also coloring each bar based on the current chart’s bias.
Features:
Persistent Bar Coloring: Bars are colored green for bullish bias (close above previous high), red for bearish bias (close below previous low), and persist the last color if neither condition is met. This makes trend shifts and momentum easy to spot at a glance.
Bias Change Alerts: Get notified instantly when the bias flips from bullish to bearish or vice versa, helping you stay on top of potential trade setups or risk management decisions.
Multi-Timeframe Bias Table: A table anchored in the top right corner displays the current bias for the Monthly, Weekly, and Daily charts, color-coded for quick reference. This gives you a clear view of higher timeframe context while trading any chart.
Consistent Logic: The same objective bias logic is used for all timeframes, ensuring clarity and reliability in your analysis.
How to Use:
Use the bar colors for instant visual feedback on trend and momentum shifts.
Watch the top-right table to align your trades with higher timeframe bias, improving your edge and filtering out lower-probability setups.
Set alerts to be notified of bias changes, so you never miss a potential opportunity.
This tool is ideal for traders who value multi-timeframe analysis, want clear visual cues for trend direction, and appreciate having actionable alerts and context at their fingertips.
DDDDD: ATR & ADR Table + Suggested Time-based Exit📈 DDDDD: ATR & ADR Table + Suggested Time-based Exit
This indicator provides a simple yet powerful table displaying key volatility metrics for any timeframe you apply it to. It is designed for traders who want to assess the volatility of an asset, estimate the average time required for a potential move, and define a time-based exit strategy.
🔍 Features:
Displays ATR (Average True Range) for the selected length
Shows Average Range (High-Low) and Maximum Range over a configurable number of bars
Calculates Avg Bars/Move → average number of bars needed to achieve the maximum range
Calculates Recommended Exit Bars → suggested maximum holding period (in bars) before considering an exit if price hasn’t moved as expected
All values dynamically adjust based on the chart’s current timeframe
Outputs values directly in a table overlay on your main chart for quick reference
📝 How to interpret the table:
Field Meaning
ATR (14) Average True Range over the last 14 bars (volatility indicator)
Avg Range (20) Average High-Low range over the last 20 bars
Max Range Maximum High-Low range observed in the last 20 bars
Avg Bars/Move Average number of bars it takes to achieve a Max Range move
Rec. Exit Bars Suggested max holding period (bars) → consider exit if move hasn’t occurred
✅ How to use:
Apply this indicator to any chart (works on minutes, hourly, daily, weekly…)
It will automatically calculate based on the chart’s current timeframe
Use ATR & Avg Range to gauge volatility
Use Avg Bars/Move to estimate how long the market usually takes to achieve a big move
Use Rec. Exit Bars as a soft stop — if price hasn’t moved by this time, consider exiting due to declining probability of a breakout
⚠️ Notes:
All values are relative to your current chart timeframe. For example:
→ On a daily chart, ATR represents daily volatility
→ On a 1H chart, ATR represents hourly volatility
“Bars” refers to the bars of the current timeframe. Always interpret time accordingly.
Perfect for traders who want to:
Time their trades based on average volatility
Avoid overholding losing positions
Set time-based exit rules to complement price-based stoplosses
Multi-timeframe Moving Average Overlay w/ Sentiment Table🔍 Overview
This indicator overlays selected moving averages (MA) from multiple timeframes directly onto the chart and provides a dynamic sentiment table that summarizes the relative bullish or bearish alignment of short-, mid-, and long-term moving averages.
It supports seven moving average types — including traditional and advanced options like DEMA, TEMA, and HMA — and provides visual feedback via table highlights and alerts when strong momentum alignment is detected.
This tool is designed to support traders who rely on multi-timeframe analysis for trend confirmation, momentum filtering, and high-probability entry timing.
⚙️ Core Features
Multi-Timeframe MA Overlay:
Plot moving averages from 1-minute, 5-minute, 1-hour, 1-day, 1-week, and 1-month timeframes on the same chart for visual trend alignment.
Customizable MA Type:
Choose from:
EMA (Exponential Moving Average)
SMA (Simple Moving Average)
DEMA (Double EMA)
TEMA (Triple EMA)
WMA (Weighted MA)
VWMA (Volume-Weighted MA)
HMA (Hull MA)
Adjustable MA Length:
Change the length of all moving averages globally to suit your strategy (e.g. 9, 21, 50, etc.).
Sentiment Table:
Visually track trend sentiment across four key zones (Hourly, Daily, Weekly, Monthly). Each is based on the relative positioning of short-term and long-term MAs.
Sentiment Symbols Explained:
↑↑↑: Strong bullish momentum (short-term MAs stacked above longer-term MAs)
↑↑ / ↑: Moderate bullish bias
↓↓↓: Strong bearish momentum
↓↓ / ↓: Moderate bearish bias
Table Customization:
Choose the table’s position on the chart (bottom right, top right, bottom left, top left).
Style Customization:
Display MA lines as standard Line or Stepline format.
Color Customization:
Individual colors for each timeframe MA line for visual clarity.
Built-in Alerts:
Receive alerts when strong bullish (↑↑↑) or bearish (↓↓↓) sentiment is detected on any timeframe block.
📈 Use Cases
1. Trend Confirmation:
Use sentiment alignment across multiple timeframes to confirm the overall trend direction before entering a trade.
2. Entry Timing:
Wait for a shift from neutral to strong bullish or bearish sentiment to time entries during pullbacks or breakouts.
3. Momentum Filtering:
Only trade in the direction of the dominant multi-timeframe trend. For example, ignore long setups when all sentiment blocks show bearish alignment.
4. Swing & Intraday Scalping:
Use hourly and daily sentiment zones for swing trades, or rely on 1m/5m MAs for precise scalping decisions in fast-moving markets.
5. Strategy Layering:
Combine this overlay with support/resistance, RSI, or volume-based signals to enhance decision-making with multi-timeframe context.
⚠️ Important Notes
Lower-timeframe values (1m, 5m) may appear static on higher-timeframe charts due to resolution limits in TradingView. This is expected behavior.
The indicator uses MA stacking, not crossover events, to determine sentiment.
Bias TableOverview
The Bias Table Indicator is a multi-timeframe analysis tool designed to provide a quick sentiment overview across multiple timeframes. It combines signals from Moving Averages (MAs) and Oscillators to determine market bias, helping traders make more informed decisions.
Key Features
✔ Multi-Timeframe Analysis (MTF) – Displays market bias across up to five timeframes.
✔ Customizable Signals – Choose whether bias is based on Moving Averages (MAs), Oscillators, or a combination of both.
✔ Visual Table Format – The indicator presents the bias as a color-coded table in the bottom-right corner of the chart for quick reference.
✔ Adjustable Colors & Display Settings – Users can customize colors for different sentiment states (Strong Buy, Buy, Neutral, Sell, Strong Sell).
How It Works
Bias Calculation: The indicator evaluates market conditions using preset values (which can be replaced with actual logic) to determine sentiment for each timeframe.
Multi-Timeframe Support: The table can display bias from hourly to monthly timeframes, giving traders a broader view of market conditions.
Customizable Signals: Users can filter the table to show bias based only on MAs, Oscillators, or a combination of both.
Interpreting the Table
📊 Timeframes: The leftmost column shows selected timeframes (e.g., 1H, 4H, 1D, 1W, 1M).
📈 Signal Columns:
MAs – Bias based on Moving Averages.
Oscillators – Bias based on momentum indicators like RSI, Stochastics, etc.
All – A combined bias based on both MAs & Oscillators.
🚦 Color-Coded Ratings:
🔵 Strong Buy – High bullish strength.
🔹 Buy – Moderate bullish sentiment.
⚪ Neutral – No clear trend.
🔸 Sell – Moderate bearish sentiment.
🔴 Strong Sell – High bearish strength.
Best Used For:
📈 Trend Confirmation: Validate signals from your primary strategy.
⏳ Multi-Timeframe Analysis: See whether short-term and long-term trends align.
⚡ Quick Sentiment Check: Get a high-level view of market conditions without analyzing multiple indicators separately.
Customization Options:
Select which timeframes to include in the table.
Choose whether to base bias on MAs, Oscillators, or both.
Adjust colors for each signal type.
Multiple Values TableThis Pine Script indicator, named "Multiple Values Table," provides a comprehensive view of various technical indicators in a tabular format directly on your trading chart. It allows traders to quickly assess multiple metrics without switching between different charts or panels.
Key Features:
Table Position and Size:
Users can choose the position of the table on the chart (e.g., top left, top right).
The size of the table can be adjusted (e.g., tiny, small, normal, large).
Moving Averages:
Calculates the 5-day Exponential Moving Average (5DEMA) using daily data.
Calculates the 5-week and 20-week EMAs (5WEMA and 20WEMA) using weekly data.
Indicates whether the current price is above or below these moving averages in percentage terms.
Drawdown and Williams VIX Fix:
Computes the drawdown from the 365-day high to the current close.
Calculates the Williams VIX Fix (WVF), which measures the volatility of the asset.
Shows both the current WVF and a 2% drawdown level.
Relative Strength Index (RSI):
Displays the current RSI and compares it to the RSI from 14 days ago.
Indicates whether the RSI is increasing, decreasing, or flat.
Stochastic RSI:
Computes the Stochastic RSI and compares it to the value from 14 days ago.
Indicates whether the Stochastic RSI is increasing, decreasing, or flat.
Normalized MACD (NMACD):
Calculates the Normalized MACD values.
Indicates whether the MACD is increasing, decreasing, or flat.
Awesome Oscillator (AO):
Calculates the AO on a daily timeframe.
Indicates whether the AO is increasing, decreasing, or flat.
Volume Analysis:
Displays the average volume over the last 22 days.
Shows the current day's volume as a percentage of the average volume.
Percentile Calculations:
Calculates the current percentile rank of the WVF and ATH over specified periods.
Indicates the percentile rank of the current volume percentage over the past period.
Table Display:
All these values are presented in a neatly formatted table.
The table updates dynamically with the latest data.
Example Use Cases:
Comprehensive Market Analysis: Quickly assess multiple indicators at a glance.
Trend and Momentum Analysis: Identify trends and momentum changes based on various moving averages and oscillators.
Volatility and Drawdown Monitoring: Track volatility and drawdown levels to manage risk effectively.
This script offers a powerful tool for traders who want to have a holistic view of various technical indicators in one place. It provides flexibility in customization and a user-friendly interface to enhance your trading experience.
Multi-Indicator Signal with TableThis indicator is a versatile multi-indicator tool designed for traders who want to combine signals from various popular indicators into a single framework. It not only visualizes buy and sell signals but also provides a clear, easy-to-read table that summarizes the included indicators and their respective signal colors.
Key Features:
RSI (Relative Strength Index):
Buy Signal: RSI falls below the oversold level (default: 30).
Sell Signal: RSI rises above the overbought level (default: 70).
Signal Color: Green.
MACD (Moving Average Convergence Divergence):
Buy Signal: MACD line crosses above the signal line.
Sell Signal: MACD line crosses below the signal line.
Signal Color: Blue.
MA Crossover (Moving Average Crossover):
Buy Signal: Short EMA (default: 7) crosses above Long SMA (default: 14).
Sell Signal: Short EMA crosses below Long SMA.
Signal Color: Purple.
Stochastic Oscillator:
Buy Signal: Stochastic %K falls below 20 and crosses above %D.
Sell Signal: Stochastic %K rises above 80 and crosses below %D.
Signal Color: Yellow.
TSI (True Strength Index):
Buy Signal: TSI crosses above the zero line.
Sell Signal: TSI crosses below the zero line.
Signal Color: Red.
Dynamic Signal Table:
A clean, compact table displayed at the top-right corner of the chart, summarizing the indicators and their respective signal colors for quick reference.
Customization:
All indicator parameters are fully adjustable, allowing users to fine-tune settings to match their trading strategy.
Signal colors and table design ensure a visually intuitive experience.
Usage:
This tool is ideal for traders who prefer a multi-indicator approach for generating buy/sell signals.
The combination of different indicators helps to filter out noise and increase the accuracy of trade setups.
Notes:
Signals appear only after the confirmation of the current bar to avoid false triggers.
This indicator is designed for educational purposes and should be used in conjunction with proper risk management strategies.
1% Range Bars with Sequence TableOverall Logic :
The script is designed to help traders visualize and analyze price movements on the chart, where each 1% movement is highlighted with a corresponding symbol. Additionally, the table helps track and analyze the number and length of consecutive price movements in one direction, which can be useful for identifying trends and understanding market dynamics.
This script can be particularly useful for traders looking for recurring patterns in price movements and wanting to quickly identify significant changes on the chart.
Main elements of the script :
Price Percentage Change:
The script tracks the price movement by 1% from the last significant value (the value at which the last 1% change was recorded).
If the price rises by 1% or more, a green circle is displayed above the bar.
If the price drops by 1% or more, a red circle is displayed below the bar.
Sequence Counting:
The script counts the number of consecutive 1% moves upwards (green circles) and downwards (red circles).
Separate counters are maintained for upward and downward movements, increasing each time the respective movement occurs.
If an opposite movement interrupts the sequence, the counter for the opposite direction is reset.
Sequence Table:
A table displayed on the chart shows the number of sequences of 1% movements in one direction for lengths from 1 to 15 bars.
The table is updated in real-time and shows how many times sequences of a certain length occurred on the chart, where the price moved by 1% in one direction.
DeleteArrayType█ OVERVIEW
Here are common functions usually delete drawing once array of drawing is recall.
Method is used as in pine script version 5 instead of custom function.
It is an upgrade from DeleteArrayObject , which may not support overload parameter in future.
Library "DeleteArrayType"
TODO: Delete array type especially for drawings
method deleteLabel(id)
TODO: Delete array
Namespace types: array
Parameters:
id (array)
Returns: TODO: label.delete()
method deleteLine(id)
TODO: Delete array
Namespace types: array
Parameters:
id (array)
Returns: TODO: line.delete()
method deleteLineFill(id)
TODO: Delete array
Namespace types: array
Parameters:
id (array)
Returns: TODO: linefill.delete()
method deletePolyLine(id)
TODO: Delete array
Namespace types: array
Parameters:
id (array)
Returns: TODO: polyline.delete()
method deleteBox(id)
TODO: Delete array
Namespace types: array
Parameters:
id (array)
Returns: TODO: box.delete()
method deleteTable(id)
TODO: Delete array
Namespace types: array
Parameters:
id (array)
Returns: TODO: table.delete()
Ticker Correlation Matrix Table and Heatmap [SS]Hello everyone,
I am in the process of releasing some of my own utility indicators/things I use to reference and perform analyses.
I do a lot of quantitative/math based analyses, including correlation assessments that I traditionally would need to export data from Tradingview and perform in SPSS, Excel or R. I have been slowly building a repertoire of Excel/R functionality right on pinescript so I do not need to constantly export data and can perform the assessments right on Tradingview.
This is an example of such an indicator.
About the Indicator:
It is a correlation table/matrix indicator. It will allow up to 10 ticker inputs, which can be stocks, economic data, anything available on Tradingview, and it will perform a correlation assessment in a matrix / heatmap style.
The indicator will show the various correlations among all of the selected ticker inputs and will colour them based on correlation strength and type.
Strong negative correlations will appear bright red.
Strong positive correlations will appear bright green.
Complete absence of correlation (i.e. 0) will show bright orange.
The rest will show a darker shade to indicate less strength/correlation.
Calculation Functions
In addition to outputting a correlation matrix, the indicator is also able to express the relationship between tickers in a linear expression using the y = mx + b formula.
If we look at table, we can see that MSFT and AAPL have a significantly strong correlation of 0.82.
If we wanted to express this relationship mathmatically, we can ask the indicator to represent the linear relationship in our y = mx + b format. We simply toggle to our menu and select the Convert From MSFT (Ticker 2) and convert to APPL (Ticker 3):
When we select this, a new table will populate below and give you the expression as well as the amount of error associated with it:
In this case, we can see that the equation is y = 0.553x + 0.626 with a range of around 10 points in either direction.
This means that, to convert MSFT to AAPL, we would multiply the MSFT price by 0.553 and then add 0.626. So if we try it, MSFT closed at 328.41. So we substitute:
AAPL price = 0.553(328.41) + 0.626
AAPL price = 181.61 + 0.626
AAPL Price = 182.24 +/- 10
AAPL actually closed at 184.12. So pretty good. If we try another, let's do SPY to XLF:
So we substitute, SPY closed at 449.16.
XLF Price = 449.16(0.077) + 0.084
XLF price = 34.59 + 0.084
XLF price = 34.67
XLF actually closed at 34.49.
This is handy if you want to see how one stock price may affect another. If you are long on one stock and short on another, you can use this to determine what the likely outcome may be for the alternative stock. However, I recommend only performing this on tickers that have a relationship of 0.7 or higher, or a relationship of -0.7 or lower.
I always had to use SPSS to do this, so being able to do this right in Pinescript for me is a huge convenience!
Some other uses:
As I tend to post educational stuff on Tradingview and I frequently use correlation matrices, I have formatted the indicator to be more aesthetically pleasing for these purposes. Thus, you can unselect extra ticker slots that you do not need. IF I only need to display 3 tickers, I can unselect tickers 4 - 10. The end result is a cleaner table:
Essential Functions:
The assessment length is defaulted to 75 candles on the daily timeframe. Be sure to have the daily timeframe opened when you are viewing the indicator.
You can increase or decrease the assessment length as you desire.
You can also specify the source. The source is defaulted to close, but if you want to see the direct correlation of ticker's highs and/or lows, you can modify the source input in the settings menu to look at this.
Just remember to have the chart opened to whatever timeframe you are looking at.
And that's the indicator! Hopefully you find it helpful. Its more of an academic indicator, but it is performing a function that I personally use frequently in analyses, so I hope you may also benefit from it as well!
Thanks for checking it out! Safe trades everyone!
Correlation Stock Market Table by [VanHelsing]This is a correlation table, it correlates with current opened asset (chart).
In settings you can change periods of days and change assets what you want to see in table.
The main feature of this table is an changing alert, it changes values depends on settings what you chose, you can use it for send whole table to your spreadsheets like screenshot below.
To send a table you need a webhook service.
Like you see it sends whole table to a one cell, so you need separate values by "=TRANSPOSE(SPLIT(cell_id, " "))" it will separate values verticaly by space and then you need separate these values what you now have in a column to the rows horizontaly by function:
=SPLIT(cell_id, ",") now it will separate values by comma.
This is an alert in code
That's it now you have a fully automated table!
BTC Performance Table / BTC Seasonality Visualization
This script visualizes Bitcoins "seasonality", in form of a colored table (based on the idea from "BigBangTheory")
The history table shows you which months do statistically perform better/worse in comparison to other months.
How to use this script:
Choose ticker "BLX" ("BraveNewCoin Liquid Index for Bitcoin").
Set the charts time frame to weekly or daily. Tables position on the screen and its colors are configurable.
Table explanation:
Cells show whether a gain or a loss occured from month to month, since BTC came out in 2010.
The price difference, between monthly open and monthly close, determines the cell color (negative -> red, positive -> green).
The year column shows total gain (green) or loss (red) for that particular year.
Each value is presented as a rounded percentage number.
How this script works:
The script calculates the price difference between each monthly and yearly open and close, storing those numbers inside arrays.
Then it populates the table, by using those numbers and doing the cell coloring (there will be a yellow cell, in case no change should occur).
German Short-Description
Prozentuale Übersicht in Tabellenform, der monatlichen, sowie jährlichen, Performance des Bitcoin (basierend auf der Idee von "BigBangTheory").
Hierdurch wird die "Saisonalität" des Bitcoin sichtbar. D.h. welche Monate des Jahres, im Vergleich zu anderen Monaten, statistisch gesehen öfter positiv/negativ schließen.
Zwecks vollständiger Darstellung muss der Ticker "BLX" ("BraveNewCoin Liquid Index for Bitcoin") im weekly oder daily time frame aktiv sein.
Indicator Direction Table With Bullish & Bearish LabelsINDICATOR DIRECTION TABLE WITH BULLISH AND BEARISH LABELS
This is a table that shows the bullish, bearish or neutral trend for nine different popular indicators. Each indicator label will change color in real time to make you aware of each change in direction. This way you don’t have to read and analyze a bunch of different indicators constantly and you can focus on price action instead.
Look for the entire table to turn green or red before taking positions.
You can also set alerts for when the entire table of indicators is bullish or bearish.
The indicator settings allow customization of indicator lengths & values, table position and turning the indicator table on or off.
The length and other values for each indicator can be customized to suit your preferences, but by default all of them are set to the normal default settings that Tradingview supplies the indicators with. Typically 14 as the length.
The indicators used in this table are as follows:
MACD - Moving Average Convergence Divergence
Stochastic RSI - Stochastic Relative Strength Index
Vortex - Vortex Indicator
Momentum - Momentum Indicator
RSI - Relative Strength Index
PSAR - Parabolic Stop & Reverse
DMI - Directional Movement Index
MFI - Money Flow Index
Fisher - Fisher Transform Price Action
***MARKETS***
This indicator can be used as a signal on all markets, including stocks, crypto, futures and forex.
***TIMEFRAMES***
This indicator table can be used on all timeframes.
***TIPS***
Try using numerous indicators of ours on your chart so you can instantly see the bullish or bearish trend of multiple indicators in real time without having to analyze the data. Some of our favorites are our Auto Fibonacci, Directional Movement Index + Fisher Price Action, Volume Profile With Buy & Sell Pressure, Auto Support And Resistance and Money Flow Index in combination with this indicator direction table. They all have unique features to help you make better and faster trading decisions.
Volume Pace & Pressure TableHave you ever wanted to know if a particular tickers volume is above or below average while still in the trading day? This indicator displays an easy-to-read table that informs the user exactly what is occurring in intraday volume. And a whole lot more!
Description
This indicator displays a variable table with either two or three columns and always three rows. It packs everything a user needs to know about volume in one small table. The table shows:
Current trading days volume
Average daily volume
Volume Pace
Volume Pressure (Buying & Selling)
Volume Pace
Volume Pace is a mathematical calculation invented by the author, Infinity_Trading . The problem was to figure out a way to know if the current days volume was below average or above average while still in the trading day. Calculations like Percent Daily Volume don’t work during the intraday trading hours. For example, say SPY has a 20-day volume average of 100 million shares. If in the first hour SPY has only traded 10 million shares then dividing the current volume into the average daily volume doesn’t tell the user anything when there is still 5.5 hours of trading left in the trading day. There had to be a better way! The solution was to chop up the trading day into evenly divisible time periods (i.e. <= 30 minutes). The Volume Pace algorithm takes the average daily volume and chops it up into small time periods based upon the charts current timeframe. This is the average volume per smaller time period. Then use the current days volume and the number of time periods that have occurred in the trading day so far (at the current moment in time i.e. the current candlestick) to form a calculation that returns the volume above or below the average volume up to that point in time.
Volume Pace Equations
Intraday Vol. Pace = Today’s Current Vol. - ( ( Average Daily Vol. / Time periods in trading day ) * Time periods that have occurred so far in trading day )
Postday Vol. Pace = Today’s Trading Vol. - Average Daily Vol.
^ Vol. = Volume (because TradingViews pine tags are dumb)
Volume Pace Definitions
Volume Pace is the difference in cumulative volume between todays current volume and the average daily volume up to same time of the day
Volume Pace Usage
If the Volume Pace is a positive number then it means that up to the current trading time the volume is that amount greater than the average daily volume over that same intraday time span.
If the Volume Pace is a negative number then it means that up to the current trading time the volume is that amount smaller than the average daily volume over that same intraday time span.
If the Volume Pace is positive during the intraday then the volume is on track to be an above average volume trading day.
If the Volume Pace is negative during the intraday then the volume is on track to be a below average volume trading day.
The Percent Volume Pace is the percent increase or decrease of the current volume compared to the average volume up to the same time of day. Or the Percent Volume Pace is the Volume Pace expressed as a percentage.
After the trading day is complete the Volume Pace will be the difference between the Daily Volume and the Average Daily Volume. And the same thing applies to the Percent Volume Pace.
Volume Pressure
The author, Infinity_Trading, did not invent the calculations for Volume Pressure but the definitions and explanations of Volume Pressure are their own creations. In specific terms, Volume Pressure is a mathematical calculation that uses the direction and distances of individual candlesticks bodies and wicks to assign a numerical value to volume.
buyingPressure = vol * (close - low) / (high - low)
sellingPressure = vol * (high - close) / (high - low)
^ vol = Volume (because TradingViews pine tags are dumb)
The author wants to make clear that volume “pressure” isn’t a real thing. Trades in any market require a buyer and a seller. So there is always an equal number of buyers and sellers. Thus, the idea that there are more buyers or more sellers isn’t rooted in reality. BUT the author believes that the calculation and understanding of “volume pressure” takes a very complex subject (price moment in a market) and condenses into something that intuitively makes sense to humans (pressure) and places it onto something that is already on everyone’s charts (volume bars).
The calculation for Buying Pressure is really calculating the upward distance between the low and the close of the candle. While Selling Pressure is measuring the downward distance from the high to the close. And both are using volume bars to express these measurements. So if an individual candle goes down then the red Selling Pressure will be more on the stacked bar chart than the green Buying Pressure. And vice versa for candles that went up. If a Volume Pressure bar is completely one color then it means, for a downward candle, the low and close were equivalent, and for an upward candle, the high and the close were the same. Lastly, the Buying & Selling Pressure will always add up to 100%.
Inputs and Style
In the Input section the user can set the number of days to use for all of the average calculations. All aspects of the table can be controlled. The background color, text color, border widths, and border colors. Also, the table can be moved to 9 unique locations around the chart for complete user control. Also, the user can use their cursor to hover over each cell in the table to reveal a tooltip definition of the calculation in the cell.
Special Notes
The volume table won’t display when the chart timeframe is weekly or monthly because the logic uses “daily” volume.
The Volume Pace column in the table disappears when the timeframe is greater than 30 minutes. Because for Volume Pace to work the time periods must be equally divisible into 6.5 hours (the duration of trading day).
P/L panelThis is not a indicator or strategy.
I thought of having a table showing running profit or loss on chart from a specific price.
I tried to put the same in code and ended up with this code.
This is a table showing the running profit or loss from a manually specified price and quantity.
when you add the code, This table asks us to input the entry price and quantity.
It will calculate the running profit or loss with respect to running price and puts that in the table.
We will have to input two things.
1.) entry price: the price at which a position(long/short) is taken.
2.) Quantity: A +value need to be entered for Long position and -value for short position.
code detects whether its a long position or short position based on the quantity info.
for example if a LONG position is taken at a price 60 of 100 quantity,
then in price we need to enter 60
and in quantity 100 (+ve value)
for SHORT position at a price of 60 of 100 quantity,
in price we need to enter 60
and in quantity -100 (-ve value)
once the table is added to the chart.
Just double click on the table, it will open the settings tab and we can provide new inputs price/quantity/position.
positioning of table is optional and all possible positioning options are provided.
Advise further improvements required if any in this code.
This piece of code can be used along with any indicator.
For which we may need to use valuewhen() additionally.
Try it yourself and ping me if required.
Simple/Compounded Returns & Drawdowns TableVery excited to bring this script to the public. This is a very useful table that displays the performance of any strategy you give it in a more detailed view. It runs on all timeframes and at any position on the chart with the replay function. It also updates on tick changes. The table consists of three modes: Simple Equity, Compound Equity and Drawdown.
Simple Equity – shows the change in equity for every month and year. It is calculated by finding the difference in initial equity at the beginning of the month/year and the end of the month/year. The table will thus display strategy performance in blocks of time that are not correlated. It is an excellent way to see individual month/year performance from start to finish but it may not represent true change in equity over time. For example, let's assume that 100% of equity is used on every trade for simplicity. If a loss of 50% is made in the first month and a profit of 100% is made in the next month, the strategy will show 50% profit for the year. This aggregate value might be helpful to know for testing purposes, but in reality, the account is actually at break-even for the year (Initial Equity * 0.5 * 2 = Initial Equity).
Compound Equity – shows compounded change in equity for every month and year. It is calculated by finding the difference in starting equity when the strategy is run and equity at the end of the month/year. The table will thus display the true strategy performance – compounded equity at the end of each month/year.
Drawdown – shows max drawdown for every month and year. It is calculated by finding the difference between the highest equity achieved for the month/year and the trough in equity for the same month/year. Notice: strategy tester might have a max drawdown value higher than any of the drawdown values in the table. This is because the strategy tester calculates the difference between the highest and lowest equity for the entire strategy, whereas the table displays drawdowns for months and years only. Sometimes, the max drawdown for the year will also be the max drawdown for the entire strategy; hence the two values will be the same.
To use this table with your own strategy, simply find " PLACE YOUR STRATEGY CODE HERE " at the bottom of the script and place your strategy code there. Special thanks to QuantNomad for the inspiration. As always, please let me know if there are any bugs or if you need some help. Leave a like if you wish!
Dual EMA Status Table (15m & 30m)It checks whether the 9 EMA is above or below the 21 EMA on:
the 15-minute chart, and
the 30-minute chart,
and then displays their alignment in a table:
Timeframe 9 vs 21 Status
15 min 9 > 21 Bullish
30 min 9 > 21 Bullish
CONFIRM ✅ Bullish
✅ “Bullish Confirm” → 9 EMA > 21 EMA on both → uptrend bias
❌ “Bearish Confirm” → 9 EMA < 21 EMA on both → downtrend bias
⚠️ “Mixed” → 15 m and 30 m disagree → stay neutral or wait
💡 How to Use It as a Trading Signal
You can treat it as a buy/sell framework with confirmation rules:
🔹 Buy (Long) bias
Table shows ✅ Bullish confirmation
9 EMA > 21 EMA on both timeframes
Ideally, price pulls back near one of the EMAs and then bounces
You could enter after a bullish candle close above the EMAs
📍 Example entry rule:
Enter long when “✅ Bullish” appears and price closes above both EMAs on the 15 min chart.
Stop-loss below the 21 EMA or recent swing low.
🔹 Sell (Short) bias
Table shows ❌ Bearish confirmation
9 EMA < 21 EMA on both timeframes
Price retraces upward and rejects near EMAs
📍 Example entry rule:
Enter short when “❌ Bearish” appears and price closes below both EMAs on the 15 min chart.
Stop-loss above 21 EMA or recent swing high.
Chartlense Dashboard (Data, Trend & Levels)Chartlense Dashboard (Data, Trend & Levels)
Overview
This dashboard is designed to solve two common problems for traders: chart clutter and the manual drawing of support and resistance levels . It consolidates critical data from multiple indicators into a clean table overlay and automatically plots the most relevant S&R levels based on recent price action. The primary goal is to provide a clear, at-a-glance overview of the market's structure and data.
It offers both a vertical and horizontal layout to fit any trader's workspace.
Key Concepts & Calculations Explained
This indicator is more than a simple collection of values; it synthesizes data to provide unique insights. Here’s a conceptual look at how its core components work:
Automatic Support & Resistance (Pivot-Based):
The dashed support (green) and resistance (red) lines are not manually drawn. They are dynamically calculated based on the most recent confirmed pivot highs and pivot lows . A pivot is a foundational concept in technical analysis that identifies potential turning points in price action.
How it works: A pivot high is a candle whose `high` is higher than a specific number of candles to its left and right (the "Pivot Lookback" is set to 5 by default in the settings). A pivot low is the inverse. By automatically identifying these confirmed structural points, the script visualizes the most relevant levels of potential supply and demand on the chart.
Relative Volume (RVOL):
This value in the table is not the standard volume. It measures the current bar's volume against its recent average (specifically, `current volume / 10-period simple moving average of volume`).
Interpretation: A reading above 2.0 (indicated by green text) suggests that the current volume is more than double the recent average. This technique is used to identify significant volume spikes, which can add conviction to breakouts or signal potential market climaxes.
Consolidated Data for Context:
Other values displayed in the table, such as the EMAs (9, 20, 200) , Bollinger Bands (20, 2) , RSI (14) , MACD (12, 26, 9) , and VWAP (on intraday charts), use their standard industry calculations. They are included to provide a complete contextual picture without needing to load each indicator separately, saving valuable chart space.
How to Use This in Your Trading
This dashboard is designed as a tool for confluence and context , not as a standalone signal generator. Here are some ways to integrate it into your analysis workflow:
As a Trend Filter: Before considering a trade, quickly glance at the EMAs and the MACD values in the table. A price above the key EMAs and a positive MACD can serve as a quick confirmation that you are aligned with the dominant trend.
To Validate Breakouts: When the price is approaching a key Resistance level (red pivot line), watch the RVOL value . A reading above 2.0 on the breakout candle adds significant confirmation that the move is backed by strong interest. The same logic applies to breakdowns below a support level.
To Spot Potential Reversals: Confluence is key. For example, if the price is testing a Support level (green pivot line) AND the RSI in the table is approaching oversold levels (e.g., near 30), it can signal a higher probability reversal setup.
About This Indicator
This indicator was developed by the team at ChartLense to help traders declutter their charts and focus on the data that matters. We believe in making complex analysis more accessible and organized. We hope this free tool is a valuable addition to your trading process.
ATR Dynamic Stop (Table + Plot + ATR %)📊 This script displays dynamic stop levels based on ATR, designed for active traders.
Features:
- Shows long and short stop levels (price ± ATR × multiplier).
- Displays values as a floating table on the top-right corner.
- Optional plot lines directly on the chart.
- Option to calculate based on realtime price or last close.
- Displays the ATR value both in price units and as a percentage of the selected price.
- Fully customizable table: text size, text color, background color.
Inputs:
- ATR Multiplier and Length.
- Show/hide stop lines on the chart.
- Select price source (realtime or last close).
- Table appearance options.
Ideal for:
- Traders who want a clear visual stop guide.
- Combining volatility with risk management.






















