Quote from intradaybill:
Straight lines are Affine transformations that preserve two things:
a) Collinearity
b) ratios of distances
No other transformation in 2-D satisfies preserves collinearity and ratios of distances. This means that no other type of curve other than a straight line can play the roll of S&R and of a trendline.
My common sense tells me something similar, that only straight lines could be used. I played around a bit stretching lines into curves to fit onto the tops and bottoms. But, it soon became clear it was possible to draw any curve to fit any set of tops or bottoms, and if they don't follow some set of rules, they are most likely not going to hold up or provide any meaningful interpretation over different cases or instances, across time and instruments.
But that's what my common sense tells me, so I'm obligated to seek out contradicting theories or models, if there is an alternative that exists to get different perspectives.
Perhaps collinearity and ratios are the key, but rather the price must be viewed outside of time? I read one article that said sometimes time is not the invariant, so should not be the independent variable in some experiments. I don't know, I'll keep googling for something.