Troubleshooting Equality Scans
Last updated
Last updated
© StockCharts.com, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Equals signs (=) are often used in scan clauses when you are looking for a specific symbol, country, exchange, etc. The equals sign can also be used to look for a specific numeric value in a scan clause, but you may not always get the results you expect. Let's look at an example:
In the above chart, both the top MACD Line (12,26,9) and the bottom MACD Line (20,36,9) for HBI appear to have the same value: 0.800.
Now let's run a scan to look for symbols where those two MACD Line values are equal to each other:
If we ran this scan on the same date as the chart, the scan would net us only one result:
Even though the HBI chart showed identical values for these two indicators, HBI does not appear in our scan results.
This discrepancy is because the values displayed on the chart are rounded to a certain number of decimal points (typically 2 or 3) for display purposes. The values used by the Scan Engine are not rounded to this degree - the more precise values used by the Scan Engine are often not exactly equal. If the longer-term MACD Line (20,36,9) is 0.8003 and the shorter-term MACD Line (12,26,9) is 0.8004, the Scan Engine does not consider those two values to be equal.
How can we fix our scan so we get the results we expect?
When comparing one calculated value to another, it is better to replace the one “equals” clause with two “close enough” clauses, like this:
This tells the Scan Engine to return results where one MACD Line is within one cent above or below the other - not identical values, but extremely close to each other. When we run the updated scan, we see that HBI now appears in the scan results:
For even greater precision, you could scan for values within one tenth of a cent of each other:
As long as the values are within that small range defined by the two clauses, they are “close enough” to be considered “equal” by our scan.
The equals sign is great for non-numeric comparisons, but should be used with caution when comparing numeric values. When you do need to compare numbers, it is better to use “close enough” clauses, defining a small range of values so similar that they are essentially equal.