In the Chan Theory technical system, the four-dimensional trend chart is the core tool. Currently, the 5-minute level is still in the construction phase, with insufficient data for the W1 segment, and it has not been fully drawn yet. Once the trends of the four dimensions X, Y, W, and S are clearly presented, trading decisions become as intuitive as observing the palm lines—this is exactly the core point emphasized by the Chan master.
From a practical perspective, traders who master four-dimensional thinking can map the market structure in their minds in real-time; the charts are just auxiliary verification. The current counter shows a status of S6W0Y2X2, with the market operating within the W1 of S7 and Y3 of W1 and X3. This layered and clear counting system provides a quantifiable reference for complex market movements. The deeper the understanding of the standard Chan framework, the greater the room for market prediction.
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
8 Likes
Reward
8
5
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
StakeTillRetire
· 01-09 11:02
Having four dimensions in your mind, charts become useless. It's easy to say, but really difficult...
View OriginalReply0
DataBartender
· 01-06 11:53
Palm print theory is indeed absolute, but with only 5 minutes of data... let's wait until W1 is complete before making any judgments, or else it's easy to make blind conclusions.
View OriginalReply0
SlowLearnerWang
· 01-06 11:52
Oh no, it's this set of four-dimensional charts again. I have to ponder for a long time every time I look at it to understand what it's talking about.
Palm line theory for trading sounds super mystical, but in reality, you still have to watch the market closely, right?
Don't boast about the data being insufficient; wait until W1 is complete before talking.
This combo of S7W1Y3X3 makes my head buzz—it's all just code.
No matter how deep the Chan theory framework is, it still depends on whether the market gives face. No matter how strong the prediction, it can't escape the black swan, right?
Mapping the market in my mind? In my brain, I only see the money I lost somewhere.
Chart-based verification is the real truth; everything else feels a bit虚 (虚 can mean虚幻,虚假,虚无, depending on context).
View OriginalReply0
CryptoPunster
· 01-06 11:39
Is palm reading just as intuitive? Bro, I can't even understand the trend of my own account, and you want me to read palms [Dog Head]
This four-dimensional stuff sounds impressive, but in actual trading, the mind is still one-dimensional—the dimension of losing money
S6W0Y2X2? I only know one coordinate system: the loss coordinate system, where both axes are red
The deeper the framework understanding, the better the prediction? Then am I going to cut my losses again today [Funny]
Chart-assisted verification? I can see my charts clearly, and I can see my losses clearly
To put it simply, it's still that one sentence: no matter how perfect the theory is, it can't withstand a reckless all-in move
In the Chan Theory technical system, the four-dimensional trend chart is the core tool. Currently, the 5-minute level is still in the construction phase, with insufficient data for the W1 segment, and it has not been fully drawn yet. Once the trends of the four dimensions X, Y, W, and S are clearly presented, trading decisions become as intuitive as observing the palm lines—this is exactly the core point emphasized by the Chan master.
From a practical perspective, traders who master four-dimensional thinking can map the market structure in their minds in real-time; the charts are just auxiliary verification. The current counter shows a status of S6W0Y2X2, with the market operating within the W1 of S7 and Y3 of W1 and X3. This layered and clear counting system provides a quantifiable reference for complex market movements. The deeper the understanding of the standard Chan framework, the greater the room for market prediction.