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- 81 Results (2 Threads, 79 Replies)
- Tavurth replied Jul 20, 2015
Nice work TK, thanks for keeping it scientific
- Tavurth replied Jul 19, 2015
I assume that the OP means this: For Sell 1) Only on a bull candle 2) RSI at 70 or above 3) STOCH at 80 or above For Buy 1) Only on a bear candle 2) RSI at 30 or below 3) STOCH at 20 or below When sharing information, it is important to be precise. ...
- Tavurth replied Jul 9, 2015
Awesome post!
- Tavurth replied Jul 7, 2015
Be warned that things are getting volatile this week, make sure to use an ATR (or similar) based stop, so as not to get faked out too often.
- Tavurth replied Jul 4, 2015
There is a lot of NLP in some of these videos you post. I don't trust it, unless I made it.
- Tavurth replied Jul 4, 2015
A fisherman at heart!
- Tavurth replied Jul 4, 2015
Don't expect all the answers to be given for you. I've laid out an interesting lobster on the table, if you don't know how to use a pair of pliers, you might never reach the meat inside.
- Tavurth replied Jul 3, 2015
Same bars, but in Excel CSV format: url Edit: Reattached the file, it was OLHC, now it is correct.
- Tavurth replied Jul 3, 2015
You're looking for a PI trend? Here's the normalised data I used: url (1 million digits before compression) If you want to change the norm value, run a script that removes either [4,3,2 or 1] from every lines OHLC values.
- Tavurth replied Jul 3, 2015
Sure, example: 3.141592653 => array(3,1,4,1,5,9,2,6,5,3); Normalise (-4.5) => array(-1.5,-3.5,-0.5,-3.5,0.5,4.5,-2.5,1.5,0.5,-1.5); Compress to OHLC => Open => -1.5 High => 4.5 Low => -3.5 Close => -1.5 In the above example, I ran a simple ...
- Tavurth replied Jul 3, 2015
Chart B was EURJPY a few weeks ago. It's interesting how similar they are. Chart A was built from sequencing a normalised fractional part of PI, and compressing into bar format.
- Charting π (PI)
Chart A: {image} {image} Chart B: {image} {image} Either Charts A, or Charts B are PI, can you tell ...
- Tavurth replied Jun 30, 2015
You are desperate for gains. Desperate to prove to yourself that you are right. Stop being desperate. Realise that it takes a long time. Changing a habit does not happen overnight. I see you've been around a while, has this been happening to you ...
- Tavurth replied Jun 30, 2015
Get a piece of paper and a pen. Using only one finger on the top of the pen, hold it vertical, tip down, pressing onto the page. Slide the pen in a direction. Try this five times. Notice how the pen moves often in the same groove, made by previous ...
- Tavurth replied Jun 30, 2015
Good call. Scalping requires an incredibly in depth knowledge of price action, not to mention militant self control.
- Tavurth replied Jun 29, 2015
I've taken long breaks in the past, usually because I was travelling, kept the market far from my mind. Coming back fresh is a wonder, for ideas and motivation both.
- Tavurth replied Jun 29, 2015
I presume from looking at your trade explorer that you have a room full of monkeys pressing buy or sell, and then take the other side of their trade. Oh wait, that's a market maker.
- Tavurth replied Jun 29, 2015
It looks like you are trading against the trend quite often. image image Have you backtested your strategy? When you backtest, and see that in perfect conditions you have an edge, trading becomes much less involving emotionally.
- Tavurth replied Jun 28, 2015
I'm between 35 and 36. I remember finding this list when I first started trading. I think it was DbPhoenix who posted it. It took me a long time to pass the steps, and you don't even realise that they are passing, but slowly, they do. Something I ...