Learning Center

The concepts behind the tools. These guides explain how indicators actually behave — what "leading" really means, why some repaint, how they get over-optimised, and how to combine timeframes and signals properly.

How Indicators Work

Every indicator is just a formula that takes a window of past price or volume data — usually open, high, low, close and volume — and reduces it to on…

Concepts

Leading vs Lagging

Leading indicators attempt to signal a turn before price moves and are usually momentum oscillators; lagging indicators confirm a move already in pro…

Concepts

Trend vs Momentum

Trend indicators identify the direction and persistence of price (moving averages, ADX, Supertrend), while momentum indicators measure the speed and …

Concepts

Repainting

Repainting is when an indicator's past signal changes after the fact; most standard indicators only update the current unclosed bar (which is normal)…

Pitfalls

Indicator Myths

Most indicator myths share one root error — treating an indicator as a crystal ball rather than a summary of past price — and debunking them means ac…

Pitfalls

Optimising Settings

Sound optimisation means finding settings that work robustly across many conditions and out-of-sample data, not the single best-performing setting on…

Technique

Overfitting

Overfitting is tailoring an indicator or strategy so closely to historical data that it captures that data's random noise rather than any real patter…

Pitfalls

Multi-Timeframe

Multi-timeframe analysis means checking an indicator on a higher timeframe to establish the dominant trend and on a lower timeframe to time entries, …

Technique

Confirmation

Proper confirmation means combining indicators that measure different things — trend, momentum, volatility and volume — so that when they agree the s…

Technique

Indicator Stacking

Stacking many indicators rarely helps because most measure the same underlying price data; the useful limit is a small set of two to four tools that …

Pitfalls

Beginner Mistakes

The most common beginner mistakes are trusting indicators as predictions, stacking too many redundant tools, ignoring the market regime, trading sign…

Pitfalls