The dashboard shows everyone the same board. The screener lets you carve it down to your setup. If your edge is fading trends near 52-week highs, or fresh reversals off the lows, or only deep-sample Date Echoes — the screener finds exactly those and ignores the rest.
Make it yours
The filters that matter most
Move since window. Filter for names that have barely moved (early, not chasing) or have already run (extended, possible fades).
Distance from 52-week extremes. Isolate names near highs, near lows, or mid-range — to match the location reading from lesson 4.4.
Trend / direction. Keep only names aligned with the kind of setup you trade.
Window type and count. Focus on long structural counts, or specific Fib windows, or confluence.
Date Echo quality. Where available, lean toward deeper samples — the discipline from lesson 3.3.
The art is combining a few filters into a repeatable 'scan' that matches a setup you understand. One good saved scan you run every day beats endlessly fiddling with twenty filters.
Build one scan you trust
Start narrow
Pick one setup you genuinely understand and build a single screen for it. Trade only that until it's second nature. Breadth comes later; a narrow, well-understood scan is where consistency starts.
A worked example: 'reversal-off-the-lows' might be — near 52-week low, a long count (90+) active, move-since-window still small, and (if shown) a Date Echo leaning up on a deep sample. That scan hands you a focused list of potential bottoms to watch for the confirmations from Module 4. The crypto board, next, applies all of this to 24/7 markets.
❓ What's the most effective way to start using the screener?
Key takeaways
The screener carves the shared board down to your specific setup.