Adding Studies to Charts

There are three ways to add studies to the chart:

      right-click the chart, then click Add Study to open the Add Study window

      click the Studies button on the chart toolbar to open the Manage and Add Studies window, click the study, then click Add

      click the study button on the active window toolbar

To add a study button to the toolbar, click the Studies button, then click the study button you want to add. You can also use Toolbar Manager.

Manage and Add Studies window

To open this window, click the Studies button.

 

Button

Action

Close

Closes Manage or Add Studies window.

Clear Tab

Clears all of the buttons that are on the toolbar.

Full View

Removes the tabbed windows, and shows all studies and tools on one window.

Add

Adds the study to the chart.

Setup

Opens study parameters.

Info

Opens online Help.

 

Add Study window

To open this window, right-click the chart, then click Add Study.

 

Component

Action

Category of Studies

Click the arrow to open a menu of available study types.

Info

Click to open online Help.

Study/Name

Start typing a name in this field, and the list of studies is automatically filtered.

Setup

Click to open parameters.

Top pane

Most recently used studies.

Bottom pane

All studies that meet the filter criteria.

as an Overlay

Click to overlay the study on the chart rather than have the study added to the bottom of the chart in its own pane.

Applied to

Click the arrow to open a menu of components the study can be applied to in addition to the bar.

Study Button on Toolbar

Adds the study button to the toolbar.

Access Tab View

Opens the Manage and Add Studies window.

Add

Click to add the study to the chart.

Close

Click to close the Add Study window.

 

Note: If you apply an overlay study to a study with more than one curve, the ShareScale parameter of the overlay study must be on (and not set to Auto) for scale sharing to be successful. Setting the parameter to Auto could lead to separate ShareScale behavior for curves of the same study. For example, if you apply Moving Average (MA) to the Volume study, and Moving Average ShareScale =Auto, then the Vol and VolFilt bars in the Volume study output are scaled differently.