VISL Chart Patterns

VISL
  1. 1Pick how to scan. Detection sets sensitivity — Daily (standard) → Weekly (big swings). History sets how far back to look.
  2. 2Read the summary. The tiles at the top give the current read: net bias, the strongest pattern, and the one nearest to triggering.
  3. 3Scan the list. Use the Actionable, Watchlist, and History tabs to browse patterns. Click a pattern card to focus it.
  4. 4Inspect on the chart. Focusing draws the pattern’s pivots plus its break (blue), target (amber) and invalidation lines.
  5. 5Filter to what matters. Use the status controls (Confirmed, Forming, Invalidated) to hide noise and find exactly what you are looking for.
No active chart patterns on VISL on the daily timeframe right now.
Detection
History
Click a pattern card to draw the pattern shape on the candles — labeled pivots (Head, Shoulders, Bottoms), neckline, breakout point, projection and invalidation. Click again to clear.
0 patterns
Nothing here right now.
No confirmed pattern is currently in play — check the Watchlist tab.
Historical accuracy
0 of 0 confirmed patterns reached projection
Avg move when projection reached
measured from break level
Avg sessions to projection
after confirmation
Best pattern on VISL
needs ≥3 completions

Pattern history — every completed pattern and its outcome

No completed patterns yet.

No active chart patterns are forming on VISL on the daily timeframe right now. Browse the full pattern history below, or switch to the intraday or weekly view. View VISL full stock analysis →

How to read this chart pattern scanner

A chart pattern is a recognisable shape that price traces out over days, weeks or months as buyers and sellers fight for control. On NSE stocks these shapes — a Double Bottom carving out a floor, a Head & Shoulders rolling over at a top — tend to repeat because the crowd behaviour behind them repeats. This scanner reads the daily and weekly candles for any NSE stock and automatically marks every classical pattern it finds, with three things most chart tools leave out: a break level (the price that confirms the pattern), a target (the measured move it projects), and an invalidation level (where the setup has failed and you should step aside). A quality score (0–100) ranks how cleanly each pattern is formed so you can focus on the strongest few.

Status: where the pattern is in its life

Forming means the shape is still developing and unconfirmed. Confirmed means price has closed beyond the break level — the trigger has fired. Invalidated means the setup failed. Expired patterns are hidden by default. Treat Forming as a watchlist, not a signal.

Quality & confidence: how clean the shape is

The quality score (0–100) grades symmetry and how textbook the proportions are. We blend it with status, strength and volume confirmation into a plain confidence read. A Q80 pattern is far more trustworthy than a Q40 one — but quality measures the shape, not the outcome.

Break, target and invalidation

Break level is the price that confirms the pattern; target is the measured move it projects; invalidation is your line in the sand. The detail card shows the risk/reward and the percentage distance from the current price to the break level, so you can see how close a setup is to triggering.

Reversal vs continuation chart patterns

Reversal patterns mark the end of a trend — they signal a likely change of direction. Continuation patterns are pauses within a trend that usually resolve in the same direction the price was already moving. The scanner detects both.

Chart patterns this scanner detects

A 'W' — price holds the same low twice, signalling a downtrend likely turning up. Confirms on a close above the neckline.

An 'M' — price fails at the same high twice, signalling an uptrend likely turning down. Confirms on a close below the neckline.

Three peaks with a higher middle peak (the head); a classic top reversal. Confirms on a close below the neckline.

The mirror image — three troughs with a lower middle trough; a classic bottom reversal. Confirms on a close above the neckline.

Support defended three times — strong demand and a likely upside reversal once resistance breaks.

Resistance rejected three times — exhausted demand and a likely downside reversal once support breaks.

Flat resistance with rising lows beneath it; buyers absorbing supply usually breaks out upward.

Flat support with falling highs above it; sellers in control usually break it down.

Price grinds up inside narrowing up-sloping lines; fading momentum usually resolves downward.

Price drifts down inside narrowing down-sloping lines; fading selling usually resolves upward.

A rounded 'U' base then a small dip (the handle); a healthy consolidation that typically resolves higher.

A slow saucer-shaped base where a downtrend gradually flattens and turns up.

A sharp move then a brief pause; usually continues in the original direction once it breaks out.

Frequently asked questions about chart patterns

A chart pattern scanner automatically reads a stock’s price chart and flags classical formations — like Double Bottoms, Double Tops, Head & Shoulders and triangles — that traders use to anticipate the next move. Instead of eyeballing hundreds of charts, you get every detected pattern for an NSE stock in one place, each with its break level, target, invalidation level and a quality score.

Each pattern shows a status (Forming, Confirmed or Invalidated), a direction (bullish or bearish), a quality score from 0 to 100, and three price levels: the break level that confirms it, the target it projects, and the invalidation level where the idea fails. Click any pattern to draw it on the candlestick chart with those levels marked.

A bullish pattern (such as a Double Bottom or Inverse Head & Shoulders) suggests price is more likely to rise once it confirms by closing above its break level. A bearish pattern (such as a Double Top, Triple Top or Head & Shoulders) suggests price is more likely to fall once it closes below its break level.

The quality score (0–100) measures how cleanly a pattern is formed — its symmetry, how well the pivot points line up, and how textbook the proportions are. Use the “Quality ≥” slider to hide weaker setups. A higher score means a more reliable shape, but it is not a guarantee of the outcome.

The break level is the price at which the pattern is confirmed (a breakout for bullish patterns, a breakdown for bearish ones). The target is the measured move the pattern projects. The invalidation level is where the pattern has failed — if price reaches it, the setup is wrong and should be abandoned. The risk/reward ratio compares the distance to the target against the distance to invalidation.

Use the Daily timeframe for short-term and swing trading, and the Weekly timeframe for positional and longer-term decisions. Higher-timeframe patterns — and the “major” variants such as a Double Bottom (major) — develop more slowly but tend to be more meaningful, because they reflect the conviction of larger participants over a longer period.

No chart pattern is guaranteed — they express probabilities, not certainties. Confirmed patterns with a high quality score, volume confirmation and a favourable risk/reward are more dependable, but any setup can fail, which is exactly why every pattern here ships with an invalidation level. Always combine patterns with your own analysis and risk management.

Yes. The StockeZee chart pattern scanner is free to use for NSE stocks across the daily and weekly timeframes. Search any symbol to see its detected patterns, levels and quality scores.

Disclaimer: Patterns are detected algorithmically from OHLC candles; levels shown are strict mathematical derivations of the pattern's structure. StockeZee is a research tool. Nothing here is investment advice — do your own analysis and consult a SEBI-registered advisor before trading.