Doji
Open and close are very close. Market indecision usually precedes a continuation break or reversal candidate.
Use with volume, trendline, and momentum confirmation.
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Predicts Bitcoin and Ethereum price movements by percentage (%) compared to candles.
0.3 indicates whether it will rise or fall by 0.3% first
0.5 indicates whether it will rise or fall by 0.5% first
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A candle is a compact description of an interval: open, close, high, low, and the relation between body and wick.
Open and close are very close. Market indecision usually precedes a continuation break or reversal candidate.
Use with volume, trendline, and momentum confirmation.
Long lower wick (hammer) or upper wick (shooting star) indicates rejection pressure around the open-end area.
Use with support/resistance and higher-timeframe trend context.
Hammer-family variants where context matters. Hanging man follows rises; inverted hammer follows declines and can hint at rejection.
Use with support/resistance and higher-timeframe trend context.
A large candle fully covers the prior candle body. It often appears at pressure transition points.
Use with candlestick sequence and volume expansion.
Three-candle reversal structure. It becomes meaningful when the middle candle shows high indecision.
Use with gap behavior, prior trend angle, and breakout filter.
The second candle body stays inside the prior body. It can signal absorption and a potential reversal candidate.
Use with key levels and next-candle follow-through confirmation.
A harami variant where the inside candle is a doji. It highlights indecision and needs confirmation.
Use with trend context, volume, and reclaim/failed-break behavior.
A long body candle with little to no wick. It represents decisive control during that interval and is best judged by context.
Use with trend direction, volatility regime, and follow-through confirmation.
Engulfing followed by confirmation. It is stronger near key levels and after extended directional moves.
A strong opposite candle offsets multiple prior candles. It often flags high volatility and requires confirmation.
Strong body candle opening near an extreme with minimal opposite wick. It can mark decisive control in that session.
Range contraction where the new candle stays inside the prior range. Useful as a volatility compression hint before breakout.
Three successive strong candles in one direction indicate persistent trend conviction after pullback absorption.
Nested continuation structure. Significance grows when accompanied by volume expansion.
Gap-based reversal motif. It appears more clearly in markets with overnight segmentation and wide spread events.
Two-candle reversal pattern where the second candle penetrates deep into the prior body. It is stronger near key levels.
A paired high/low rejection pattern. Matching extremes often signal absorption, especially after extended runs.
A sharp sentiment flip where an opposite candle opens with strong displacement. Treat as high-energy reversal only with confirmation.
Doji variant with extreme wick imbalance. It highlights aggressive rejection and often needs next-candle follow-through.
Small body with wicks on both sides. It flags balance and is most useful as a trend exhaustion hint near levels.
Continuation pattern where small counter candles stay within the prior body, followed by trend resumption.
A repeated test of resistance/support. Break confirmation matters more than the symmetry.
A distribution/accumulation structure. Neckline reaction and retest behavior determine quality.
Compression channel with converging trendlines. Break direction is clearer with volume expansion.
A continuation pause after strong displacement. Best read with impulse strength and retest logic.
A rounded base with a shallow pullback before breakout. Confirm with structure and liquidity.
A repeated horizontal balance zone. Breakout validity improves with sweep-and-reclaim behavior.