There's a difference between a fixed stop-loss that's a set number of ticks/points/pips (not so good) and a fixed stop-loss that's fixed in a position dependent on the current market volatility, support and resistance when you open the trade (much better).
I'm "just saying".![]()
There is a third alternative: placing the stop at the point at which the market will prove that your decision to enter the trade (at whatever point you entered it) was wrong. This is neither fixed at a set number of *s nor does it have anything to do with support or resistance as they are generally defined these days. Granted this requires far more data-gathering than most beginners are willing to do, but it will tell one when to push, when to pull, when to leave alone.