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Technical Chart Indicators and Studies![]() Find descriptions, formulas, parameters, and other help for the indicators and studies used by the Barchart.com Technical Charts application below. Interactive Charts, however, share many of the same studies with Technical Charts. Some of the parameters may be slightly different between the two versions of charts. Unless otherwise specified, the parameters shown in this documentation are those used by the Technical Chart program. * Available in Interactive Charts only Note:When adding multiple moving averages on a chart, the lines will be colored in this order: red, green, blue, purple, orange.
When adding an indicator to a Technical Chart, you can change the parameters of the study by clicking on the indicator name. Moving Standard DeviationIndicator Type: Standalone Standard deviation is a statistical term that provides a good indication of volatility. It measures how widely values (closing prices for instance) are dispersed from the average. Dispersion is the difference between the actual value (closing price) and the average value (mean closing price). The larger the difference between the closing prices and the average price, the higher the standard deviation will be and the higher the volatility. The closer the closing prices are to the average price, the lower the standard deviation and the lower the volatility. Sample Chart: ![]() Calculation The steps for calculating a 20-period standard deviation are as follows:
The 20-period standard deviation for the data above is 6.787. Note that this is the "full population" version of the Standard Deviation. There is a different kind of Standard Deviation calculation that is used when you are taking a statistical sample of a population, but that version is not used in technical analysis since all of the data points are known. Parameters
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