Additional Features and Notes


1) If you don't use a TP line

   If you place the TP line on the opposite side of the current price from your SL,
   the tool will ignore it and calculate without a TP.
   The same applies if you simply don't draw a TP line at all.


2) The tool will not work if there is no SL line.

   Important: the position of your SL line also determines the trade direction
   (whether the tool calculates for a Buy or a Sell).
   Always make sure your SL line is placed correctly.


3) Spread adjustment

   For Sell trades, the exit is triggered at the Ask price.
   This means your SL is actually hit when the Bid price drops to
   your SL line minus the spread ? not exactly at your line.
   As a result, you may experience situations where your SL appears
   to be outside support, yet the position closes inside it.

   When bUseSpread is set to true (default):
   For Sell trades, the tool automatically places the actual SL
   slightly above your drawn SL line (by the spread amount).
   This way, your SL line effectively represents the Ask level,
   and you no longer need to manually account for the spread.


4) Brokers that use non-standard symbol names

   Some brokers add extra characters to currency pair names,
   such as: EURUSDpro, EURUSDfx, etc.

   If your broker uses this format, enter the extra suffix
   (e.g., "pro" or "fx") in the AddSymbol setting.
   The tool will then recognize your broker's symbol correctly.


5) The lot value shown in parentheses in LotInfoEx

   This number represents the total lot size already open
   on correlated currency pairs.

   Since correlated pairs tend to move together,
   multiple positions can all lose at the same time.
   Even if each individual lot size is set to a safe percentage,
   having many correlated positions open at once significantly
   increases your overall risk.

   Use this figure as a reference to:
     - Reduce lot size on new entries
     - Hold off on entering additional positions

   Example of correlation ? EURUSD:

   All pairs that include either EUR or USD are considered correlated.
   (e.g., EURUSD, EURGBP, USDJPY, USDCHF, GBPUSD, etc.)
