Quote from frenchfry:
Hi Jack,
would you mind to switch to a more "common"/accessible product? Maybe something like Pork Bellies? Bonds? Crude Oil? Eurostox? FDAX? Yen? I'm asking because I have no access to the K200. 
You wrote: "...Each day will begin with the three containers of the fractals being transferred to the beginning of the daily chart. ..."
Somebody new to this would open their chart and unfortunately not have those three containers on their chart. How would they go from two bars and nine cases to the three containers of the fractals? Where should they start with their two bars? Should they simply start with the first two bars that their chart displays and from there see how they can get those three containers? Should they start at the first bar of a day they choose as a starting point?
Thanks
Sorry I wasn't available to pick up the thread at the beginning of the week.
My intention was to establish the carry over on the intrument so three fractals were available for the start of Monday's trading which was over by the start of the US markets Monday am.
When a person is new to an intrument they begin by annotationg a chart in hindsight. The question being answered is your question:
"How would they go from two bars and nine cases to the three containers of the fractals?"
Youir next questions are the answer to the first question.
IT DOES NOT MATTER WHERE YOU START, YOU WILL ARRIVE AT THE SAME PLACE. The caps only show the importance of a principle and they do NOT represent any criticism or any negative connotation.
All of thinking needs to be done in a way to avoid induction. Induction has no reliability.
A chart is annotated by SKO. He is using three colors for bars. I use a yellow container whereby the second bar causes the container to appear. In SKO's chart he shows a "neutral colored bar for a second bar that is an internal relative to the first bar of the two involved. All of this provides for the nine cases.
I usually hand 10 charts to a person who is beginning with me. I ask him to copy them 5 tomes to have 50 charts. The ten charts provide a set of bars over ten days. This is 810 bars.
As you see SKO has several levels of fractals he built on a chart. From point 1, he proceeded to build using the fastest observable cases on the fastest opservable fractal.
As a trader, he could enter on bar 2 when he knew that he knew. I do not recommend that to ordinary traders. They would have to WAIT until they satified the MADA routine of having three nested fractals on their display. This happened five bars from the end of the right side (or last bar).
So a person just starting out with ten sheets of bars representing 10 days, would have to go part way through the first page to get to have the three fractals showing.
SKO failed to do this effort. Again this is not a negative critisim it is just a comment on getting on with doing a routine.
There is something else to deal with as well. Would SKO know that he knew where he was in the slowest fractal pattern? Probably not.
So the posted annotated chart points out that you cannot begin on the first bar of the day with a sereis of annotations and use them for trading for that day.
What a person must do is build annotations so he has three fractals operating in a nested manner no matter how many pars it takes to get under way. You CAN start anywhere but you have to start with the fastest fractal and you MUST have three nested fractals operating on your display.
A casual person drawing lines on charts will not be learning purposefully until he gets into a routine that is deductively based. It is like geometry class in the second form following Algebra I in the first form. Trading requires proofs and the proffs CANNOT be inductive proofs. If a person asks for an inductive proof he has made a commitment to not be able to trade successfully (See traderzones, et al). His subsequent failure will be the consequence of an undifferentiated mind.
I am going to critique the chart posted next.