You are missing trading opportunities:
- Free trading apps
- Over 8,000 signals for copying
- Economic news for exploring financial markets
Registration
Log in
You agree to website policy and terms of use
If you do not have an account, please register
Well, it's true - the phase changes the oscillation amplitude and at extremes the difference between JMA(phase=100) and JMA(phase=-100) is maximal in modulo. I am attaching a screenshot - below is this difference.
This is the result of digging through the JMA source.
Both have a 'phase' of zero. Blue is standard JMA, green is modified. Somehow the green resembles QRMA - because of the differentiation spikes. The price to which all this is attached is PRICE_MEDIAN.
This is the result of digging around in the JMA source.
You can consider me a fellow sufferer. I've never been into mash-ups, but after reading a lot of smart people, I got in. :-) It's the second time it's happened to me and the second time I've got evidence that even in this tired field one can find flowers.
I haven't had the task to look into Djurica's algorithm or JMA source code from codebase. I just had my own ideas. Having implemented one of them, I was convinced that the Golden Rule of Mechanics works. If we win in smoothness, we lose in phase delay. And vice versa. Nevertheless, using not too primitive algorithms (i.e. reducing friction losses :-) one can reach a tolerable compromise and find more or less suitable mask (if one really wants to use it).
For example. There are such advanced variants of EMA - DEMA and TEMA. As described by Bulashev, they take into account smoothing error and therefore have less phase delay. In particular, DEMA has less FS than EMA and TEMA less than DEMA. I have written an implementation of this algorithm for any arbitrary order. Increasing the order it is possible to decrease FP, but the indicator line tends to the price line and loses smoothness as a result. After some experiments I have found the ratio that is not too far from JMA in your picture and from Djuric in LeoV' s picture.
In both cases you can see that this one has slightly less FZ, but also slightly inferior smoothness. Probably by applying some external smoothing method with a sufficiently short period, you can achieve even more similarity. My point is that Djuric and JMA are good algorithms, but they are not unique and unrepeatable.
And here is my "work of art", the aforementioned product of an idea. An adaptive, line-weighted WAMA. Not as smooth as Djuric, but as good as it in terms of FZ.
Mashka is a contagious thing. Every now and then you come back to them from time to time. You know in your mind that there is a limit and the golden rule (as Yurixx mentioned) will never be cancelled, but you never know if you have reached the bottom. I think the adaptive mouving is just as good as Jurika's:
Nevertheless, the "two wipers" system does not work satisfactorily with any wipers, not even with the best Juriks. And it is unlikely to work - until we understand what we need from the SYSTEM (the simplest system - i.e. just two wipers). An idiot's dream, of course, but it seems I haven't taken everything from the mash-ups yet to give them up for good...
...- until we understand what it is that we need to demand from a SYSTEM (simple system - i.e. just two mash-ups). An idiot's dream, of course, but I don't seem to have taken everything from the mash-ups yet to give them up for good...
the system is presented in the simple and intuitive form of one or two "simple" (system) mash-ups - why dream.... that's not a good way to put it...