You are welcome. Most complicate things for themselves and then wonder why they lose money! Simple is always best. If you break your trades into 100 separate trades, and you are not able to make some money when 50 trades are completed, then one should really consider giving it up and doing something else with the money!
Mr ironchef, here is one for you to work out This image is a link to a very important law, which explains why trading today is not the same as it was many years ago, and why certain market "measurements" are of no real use for short term trading! Very interesting stuff!
When you find above, you will also find this one. D is not straight forward, so I will tell you it is "water". ABC is easy
This has nothing to do with trading, you just copied it form here: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Moreno_Sociogram_1st_Grade.png What this is all about: Mapping the social affinities of a group of individuals, Moreno’s first sociograms visualize the relationships between pupils in a classroom: who wants to be sitting next to whom? Each child can choose two others, for results that suggest that sociabilities are changing over time: the proportion of attractions between boys and girls decrease, community structures are formed and then disappear, etc. Don't try to be smarter then you are.
You are wrong, Mr smart guy Not from that site..keep trying..just like your trading I would say..LOL Oh yeh..read what is written BEFORE you reply..that will stop you being ignorant..LOEL
Reification The Kanizsa figure (Kanzsa 1979) shown in figure 4 A, is one of the most familiar illusions introduced by Gestalt theory. In this figure the triangular configuration is not only recognized as being present in the image, but that triangle is filled-in perceptually, producing visual edges in places where no edges are present in the input, and those edges in turn are observed to bound a uniform triangular region that is brighter than the white background of the figure. Idesawa (1991) and Tse (1999a, 1999b) have extended this concept with a set of even more sophisticated illusions such as those shown in Figure 4 B through D, in which the illusory percept takes the form of a three-dimensional volume. These figures demonstrate that the visual system performs a perceptualreification, i.e. a filling-in of a more complete and explicit perceptual entity based on a less complete visual input. Reification is a general principle of perceptual processing, of which boundary completion and surface filling-in are more specific computational components. The identification of this generative aspect of perception was one of the most significant contributions of Gestalt theory. What has this to do with trading?
MrScalper was trying to tell me to use my imagination when looking at chart patterns. What you see may not be what you get or what it appears. I have to look between the points and find a pattern out of "thin air". Unfortunately, I am more digital than analog. I can apply digital filters to find signals but have very poor analog pattern recognition skills. Regards,