Elliott | Wave Github

For nearly a century, the has been a cornerstone of technical analysis. Developed by Ralph Nelson Elliott in the 1930s, it posits that market prices unfold in specific patterns (impulse waves and corrective waves) driven by collective investor psychology. However, for many traders, the biggest hurdle isn't understanding the theory—it’s the subjective, time-consuming process of manually labeling waves on a price chart.

| Feature | Must-Have | Nice-to-Have | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | Readme.md explains the parameters | Jupyter Notebook examples provided | | Testing | Unit tests for basic patterns | Visual chart comparison tools | | Flexibility | Adjustable Zigzag depth | Multi-timeframe (MTF) support | | License | MIT or GPL (Free for trading) | Commercial use allowed | elliott wave github

“The wave principle is a language – and like any language, it becomes more useful when we have tools to parse it programmatically.” – R.N. Elliott (if he coded) For nearly a century, the has been a

✅ – Checks if waves adhere to common retracements (0.382, 0.5, 0.618, 0.786) and extensions (1.272, 1.618). | Feature | Must-Have | Nice-to-Have | |

: This tool is designed to find 12345 impulsive movements and ABC corrections in financial data. Highlights