We just chose two adjacent bars and the choice was for the maonry making cases. CW refers to hese bars as LL and LH and HH and HL pairs and CW calls them classic trending bars.
So I explored further by just putting in the forming of another bar and its corresponding end of bar volume known as PRV (Pro Rata Bar volume. This beginging to form bar was another of the 10 cases for adjacent bars.
What is it like to look at charts of P and V and know the total volume of the forming bar at the beginning of the bar instead of waitihng until the end of the bar? It is not CW nor is it PA trading.
By thinking about all bars and how they form and how they form relative to prior bars a trader is in a world called "front running".
He knows to hold or reverse early in each new bar.
Now he can begin to explore what are the other cases of adjacent bars and what implications do the PRV volume give to those cases?
It also becomes evident that peaks and troughs of voulume are forming as orders of events.
By looking at the geometric containts of parallelograms and how they next, a learning trader has a very full plate to work with,
I geometry learners start to learn proofs by taking a few facts and putting them in order to draw conclusions.
Here you see the same.
By having two bars in a trend, you begin to recognize that money can be extracted between the entry signal and the reversal signal. you also see that reversals could be prolonged or delayed if a hold signal becomes interposed.
adjacent bars that trend form two cases; the 8 other cases do NOT for trends BUT are located within trends or mark the ends of trends in some specific unvarying manner.
I Like to just lay out the critical thinking monster opportunity facing all people who are willing to work to think.
You aw how all dominant trends worked from right to left and you saw how all non dominant trends worked from left to right.
Three price moves make up a completed parallelogram. A long dominant trend begins with a dominant trend, switched to an opposite non dominant trend and finishes with a dominant trend. So does a short dominant trend.
See below: