Quote from jack hershey:People who use constant volume charts have to choose the specific number of contracts/shares/ etc in a chart bar. You can check the field to see the basis of most volume selections and you can check given platforms to determine if the platform can handle a given chosen value. The particular choices and offerings are interesting.
Some sectors of Technical Analysis deal with the fractal relationship of "containers" of price. The containers are either interlocking or they are not.
The combination of CVB and fractals didn't work out in the sense of using any associated "logic" where logic is a word that defines a mathematical basis like that of critical thinking or dealing with algorithms or paradigms based on their respective throeies. (See Carnap and Keynes, respectively.)
the series of multiples of 7 that could be used starts with 7, 14, 21,28..... At some point a person gets to the levels of bars on various types of displays that are used for carving turns of market profit segments that occur many times a day. Relative to Proflogic's trading rate, I notice I do about 4X the trades.
Ordinarily the LCM factor that separates people, trader to trader, is 3. The reason is that trading fractals are interlocked in a ratio of 3:1. In my case there is another difference: I tradeseamlessly and continually using HOLD/Reversal and it appears Proflogic is an ENTRY/EXIT trader.
Thus the HOLD?REVERSAL trader is forced to use interlocking fractals rather than arbitrarily determined (Visual and clear) fractals.
This is not a caase of being right or wrong; it is just how much focus there is on the efficiency and effectivenss of performance.
Ir is best to look up what the definition of a prime number is. In number theory this is quite rigorous among those who do maths.
First it would make understanding your posts a whole lot easier if you would simply respond to a comment. We can't tell your comments from the original posters'.
The reason I invented constant volume bars and use them is because they eliminate the variable aspect of time bar charts. I trade RTH like you but I find that data outside RTH invaluable to reading the overall chart continuity.
I choose specific volume bar increments as a way to create specific containers perfectly suited to my personal (and others) trading styles; Scalp, Intraday, Swing or Position.
My containers perfectly interlock. I do not use increments of 7, 14, 21, 28 . . . as you have incorrectly stated. I use increments of 7, 49, 343, 2401, 16807, 117649, 823543, 5764801, etc. These increments never very regardless of the market. Some of my students use increments of 3, 9, 27, 81, 243, 729, etc. Either set will work, it is just that the data set of 3's contains a lot more chart increments and it is a lot more difficult for the average trader to decide the environments they will trade.
Elementary logic dictates that the only way an accurate answer can possibly be obtained is for all of the information related to the problem be utilized. One can not accurately nor consistently solve ANY problem by randomly eliminating a portion of that specific problem's data set.
The difference in the number of trades taken during each container isn't relevant. What is relevant are the trades taken inside that container are easy to read & consistently profitable . . . day in and day out. Not only that but that same level of consistent profitability should be easily replicated regardless of the container speed used.
I used to trade seamlessly. I am fully aware that, "every reason to enter a trade is the exact reason to exit the last one". I came up with that myself . . . ha. You use a reversal to change position, I simple exit at that reversal point to "take a breath". It has nothing to do with efficiency but my effectiveness of performance is outstanding. I simply evolved past the need to be constantly in the market. Just like one breaths, a trader needs the same chance to gather their thoughts and relax during the trading day. It isn't that I can't enter/reverse trade . . . I simply choose not to. As I've told you before, there is more than one consistent way to extract profit from the market each and every day.