من عنده فكره عن البرنامج وطريقه تشغيله والاعدادات
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من عنده فكره عن البرنامج وطريقه تشغيله والاعدادات
البرنامج موجود على الرابط
http://www.cycle-trader.com/cycles.htm
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Bradley Cowan independently discovered the Price-Time Vector (PTV) in the early 1980’s shortly after his graduation from electrical engineering school. This tool is described in great detail in his set of books Four-Dimensional Stock Market Structures And Cycles and this manual is no substitute for that material. Anyone interested in using this tool should consult that text for a more detailed description than is provided in this documentation.
The PTV is the hypotenuse of a right angle triangle with price and time as the two legs. In its simplest form the time and price changes between two turns are measured, these two values are then squared, summed, and rooted. This is the Pythagorean theorem, which states that the area of two squares at right angles sum to the area of the square with the hypotenuse as a side.
Before using the PTV to make projections it is important that it has the correct scaling factors for the time and price sides of the triangle, which are set by selecting the PTV tab from the Tool Format Window. This window is also where the line style used for the hypotenuse of the PTV is set. The PTV uses whatever style is set in the Line tab. So if the user wants to draw PTVs with arrows he would select the arrow format in the Line tab before drawing the PTV. The color of the PTV is set in the PTV tab.
You can display two types of time ratios, static and dynamic.
Static Ratios are the type most commonly used. They divide a time range into predetermined ratios. For example, if 0.25 and 0.5 are selected for the time ratios and the mouse pointer is moved across 100 bars, the result will be ratio lines drawn at the bars 0.25 x 100 = 25 and 0.5 x 100 = 50.
Selecting the Time tab in the Tool Format Window allows you to choose the ratios to display. If a value is entered in the Dynamic Expansion Ratio box it has priority over any boxes checked for static cycles and any checked static cycle boxes are ignored.
Dynamic Ratios differ from Static Ratios in that they change by a set multiplier between each successive recurrence. For example, if the dynamic expansion ratio is set to 1.618 and the user defines the length of the initial cycle by dragging his mouse pointer across 10 bars, then the second cycle will be 10 x 1.618 = 16.18 bars. The third cycle will be 16.18 x 1.618 = 26.18 bars, and so on. If a value less than one is entered for the dynamic expansion ratio then each successive cycle will contract by that ratio.
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http://www.4shared.com/get/XYlfSwtP/...ur_Dimens.html