Quote from dkm:
Thank you.
Please see attached clip. The stitch at bar 33 was used to form horizontal FF2. Your description suggests that we fan FF5 at bar 41 EOB. Why do we not use the stitch at bar 41 to draw another horizontal FF?
I took the bars from your illustration. Here are the two internal pairs of bars from the 10 cases labeled A through J. The yellow box is a stitch; it has an H and an L which stand for high and low, respectively.
Your log shows the progress of the left bar. The close is outside of the FF1. A new red bar forms and the log shows it as a SYM B/R. Successively, the new red bar becomes paired with the left bar as a FTP B/R, a Hitch B/B and finally a stitch B/B.
You see that a WAIT is underway during a trading TF short Hold. The yellow container is automatically provided and lasts all the way from 300 seconds to 0 seconds of the countdown of the life of the new bar.
The last bar in the illustration begins as a SYM B/B and time passes and the formation of the middle and last bar mutates into a SYM B/R and remains so.
During this time you are doing M A D A. You hold on the TF short and you get nearer to point 3 of the TF.
You are able to use the two cases to form two bars. I labeled them bar 1 and bar 2. I show how each bar relates to a case and I contain the case in a box. On a minimum level platform each box is formed and it is yellow by convention.
As time passes I go through a process of taking a set of information that is too complex for a person to understand and I break it down into smaller parts so that the person can understand the smaller parts by reading. As is seen, all the these pieces are available and seen and have durations that appear in the bar and second column of the log.
This makes the "order of events" a factor and a "known" in the ooperation of the market.
Gradually an assimulation goes on with the earnest trader. He comes to understand the factors and the order in which the factors occur. You teach music. In music there are factors and they occur in an order of events. The group formed is known as a melody in some trends of factors where each factor relates to a prior factor.
It is important to know how to combine bars to form the observable FF. So far I have suggested doing combos to get FF's and this cannot be understood up to this point. I have avoided a compare and contrast so far since I feel that adds too much drama to reading this mystery I am writing.
All of the inventions that are present in your commentary greatly shadow the essence of the simplicity of combining two bars to make a FF. I can't really do a critiques since that only makes for very long posts about what is wrong and I am finding it difficult to make up simpler drills.
Of course, we see here that three bars were used to make two pairs. If that is a possibility for readers, then you are taking a step forward. If you are able to use pairs of bars to ID the case represented then that is another step forward. finally, if you step , properly you may be able to combine the two bars you have into the observable FF.
To comment on your post and illustration. I won't critique it because of the numerous errors and omissions (E&O in engineeringeze)
It looks like you are stating the applications of stitches. Luckily all cases (cases means all 10 cases) have the same application as determined by where they occur.
I will break my answer up into separate posts in order to minimize confusion.