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1#
发表于 2009-5-26 18:51:28 | 只看该作者 回帖奖励 |倒序浏览 |阅读模式
The Square of Nine is a number calculator used to forecast time and price targets for stocks
and
commodities. It is a circular arraingement of numbers in an attempt to relate the days of the
calendar
year to numbers and as such is set up in a square with the numbers going around in a circular
fashion.
The main square in this program shows the eight 45 degree segments from 2 to 9 and then the
second square starts at 10 and goes to the next odd number 25. Since each new square starts
at a
new odd number squared we can see that to go all around the square we need only calculate
the
square root of a number and add 2 to that and then re-square. This is easily seen from the fact
that
the odd number squares are all separated by 2. On this square prices meet resistance when
they
fall on the same angles or 45 degree offset angles to the original price. Furthermore a large circle
is
usually placed around the complete square with the days of the year spread around that
circumference. Angles drawn from this outer calendar day circumference to the center of the
wheel
create angles that have very strong resistance in price and time and stocks will tend to gravitate
to
those angles on important market culminations.
On this program the main square can be used to look for past highs and lows along the same
angle and therefore forecast future reversals when prices again reach those angles.
Look at the rows in the main grid to see major support and resistance numbers on either side of the number you
are looking for.
The
"Calendar" button places calendar dates in the wheel in the same format as prices so you can
see a series of dates from past highs and lows that are connected along the same angle. The
"Date Box" at the top left is the place you put a date of a major high or low or you put today's
date (the default) to get price levels forecasted for today. Below the calendar date is a "Natural Angle Date"
bar that when pressed will compute natural angles and a series of prices on those angles that
may not be in the large square above which only show the most common 45 degree separations
of the year. The natural angle that shows up when you press this bar is a number that is very
specific to the calendar date in the box at the top. At the very bottom is a row of support and
resistance numbers that are based on this very specific natural angle calculated from the
specific date entered. Again, you can enter major highs and lows in history as dates or today's
date to see trends and places prices will want to close at on the close each day. In the text box
at the very bottom you enter a current price like today's or yesterday's closing price and the
boxes will fill up with the natural prices the market wants to go to in that range on that particular
date. The row at the very bottom has "Calendar Day" in the center and represents numbers you would get from
the wheel using the outer ring and drawing lines to the center as is done on most Gann Wheels.
The only technical point you need to know is that dates CAN ONLY BE ENTERED AS :
YYYY.MMDD format. That is the full year then a decimal point and then two digits for a month(0
if needed) and two digits for the day. For much more about the use of this wheel see my new
book or my course. Accuracy is not guarenteed at extreme ranges and price levels, indeed accuracy is only
about 1/10 of one percent so at the 1100 level of the S&P the numbers could be off by one or two. The trade off
is speed and simplicity and the assumption you know what you are doing. If you don't, read up on the Square of
Nine is my other books or course.This is
considered a very simple tool in this state and users use it at their own risk.
Michael S. Jenkins  8/20/2004



This caculator is for the NYSE or markets
open from 9:30 AM to 4:00 PM.
This is a total of 390 minutes. Basic Gann
theory tells us to divide our time factors
by 1/8th's but another universal measure
that I use is 1/10th's. The left two columns
in the calculator show the natural start of the
day at 9:30 AM and the next lines
down show the 1/8th (390/8=48.75 minutes) increments, with
the next column
the 1/10th (390/10=39 minutes)increments. Note how this
explains why the market usually turns everyday
near 10:09 AM and 10:19 AM. The next columns over are for
starting times other than 9:30 AM so you can enter in the
"Start Time"
box any time where a major high or low occurred and you will
then get the natural turns for the rest of the day. Most of these
turns are good
to the minute most days!


编辑的目的:禁用Smilies


[ 本帖最后由 mzyma1355 于 2009-5-27 23:53 编辑 ]
2#
发表于 2009-5-26 20:52:11 | 只看该作者
唉,满屏的英文,就不能直接稍微译注一下,也好帮助一下弟兄们。
3#
发表于 2009-5-26 21:55:14 | 只看该作者
thanks

the source is from... ???
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