The Signals Panel is your central hub for exploring Volensy’s complete trading signal database. It is a standalone application that opens in a new browser tab from your dashboard, giving you a full-screen, distraction-free workspace for analyzing signal data. This guide walks you through every part of the interface — from accessing the panel to understanding each of the 11 data columns and their visual indicators.

Accessing the Signals Panel

To open the Signals Panel:

  1. Log in to your Volensy dashboard at volensy.com.
  2. In the sidebar navigation, click Signals Panel.
  3. The panel opens in a new browser tab as a standalone application.

The panel loads your signal data directly from the Volensy database, displaying the most recent signals first. You will see the full interface immediately: a header area at the top, a filter bar below it, and the main data table occupying the rest of the screen.

Note: The Signals Panel is accessible to all authenticated Volensy users. You must be logged in to view signal data.

Interface Layout

The Signals Panel is organized into three main sections:

Header Area

The top section displays the Volensy branding and provides context for the page. It confirms you are viewing the Signals Panel and shows the total number of signals currently matching your filters.

Filter Bar

Directly below the header, the filter bar contains 7 filter controls arranged in a horizontal row. These allow you to narrow down the signal data by market, strategy, timeframe, direction, status, result, and date range. When filters are active, indicators appear showing which filters are applied, with an option to clear them.

*See also: Filtering & Sorting Signals*

Data Table

The main body of the panel is a responsive table showing signal records. Each row represents one signal (one trade). The table has 11 columns, sortable headers, color-coded badges, and pagination controls at the bottom.

Full Signals Panel view showing the header area with Volensy branding, the filter bar with dropdown controls, and the data table populated with signal rows displaying colored badges for direction, status, and result

The 11 Data Columns

Every signal in the table displays the following 11 columns. Each column header is clickable to sort the table in ascending or descending order.

1. Date

The timestamp when the signal was generated and the position opened. Displayed in a readable date and time format. This is the primary chronological reference for each signal. By default, the table sorts by Date in descending order (newest first).

2. Market

The cryptocurrency trading pair associated with the signal. Examples include BTCUSDT, ETHUSDT, SOLUSDT, ADAUSDT, and others across the 15 supported markets. The market column helps you quickly identify which asset the signal applies to.

3. Strategy

The name of the algorithm that generated the signal. This column tells you which Volensy strategy produced the trade setup. As additional strategies are deployed, this column will help you compare performance across different algorithmic approaches.

4. Timeframe

The chart timeframe on which the strategy was operating when it generated the signal. Common values include 15m (15-minute), 1h (1-hour), 4h (4-hour), and 1D (1-day). Timeframe is critical context because the same market can produce very different signals depending on the time resolution.

5. Direction

Whether the signal is a Long (buy) or Short (sell) position. This column uses color-coded badges for instant visual identification:

  • LONG — Displayed with a green badge. Indicates the strategy expects the price to rise from the entry level.
  • SHORT — Displayed with a red badge. Indicates the strategy expects the price to fall from the entry level.

6. Entry Price

The exact price at which the position was opened. This is the price recorded at the moment the strategy’s entry conditions were met and the signal was generated. Entry price is a key data point for calculating profit and loss.

7. Exit Price

The price at which the position was closed. If the position is still open, this field will be empty. Once the position closes (by hitting a take profit target, triggering a stop loss, or receiving a strategy exit signal), the exit price is recorded here.

8. Exit Date

The timestamp when the position was closed. Like the Exit Price column, this field is empty for open positions. For closed positions, it shows the exact date and time the trade ended, allowing you to calculate how long the position was held.

9. Status

Whether the position is currently active or completed. This column uses color-coded badges:

  • Open — Displayed with a yellow badge. The position is still active and has not yet reached an exit condition. The exit price and exit date fields will be blank.
  • Closed — Displayed with a gray badge. The position has been completed. All data fields including exit price, exit date, exit reason, and PnL are populated.

10. Exit Reason

A brief description of why the position was closed. Common exit reasons include:

  • Take Profit — The price reached a predefined profit target.
  • Stop Loss — The price moved against the position and hit the protective stop level.
  • Strategy Exit — The algorithm’s own exit conditions triggered a close, independent of fixed TP/SL levels.

This column is empty for open positions and provides important context for understanding the outcome of each trade.

11. Result

The final outcome of the trade, derived from the PnL value. This column uses color-coded badges for quick scanning:

  • Win — Displayed with a green badge. The trade closed with a positive PnL (profit).
  • Loss — Displayed with a red badge. The trade closed with a negative PnL (loss).
  • Break-even — Displayed with a yellow badge. The trade closed with zero or near-zero PnL.

This column is empty for open positions since no result has been determined yet.

Close-up detail view of the data table showing 4-5 signal rows with all 11 columns visible, highlighting the colored badges -- green LONG badge, red SHORT badge, yellow Open badge, gray Closed badge, green Win badge, red Loss badge, and yellow Break-even badge

Badge Color Reference

The Signals Panel uses a consistent color system across all badges to make scanning the table fast and intuitive:

| Badge Type | Value | Color | Meaning |
|———–|——-|——-|———|
| Direction | LONG | Green | Expecting price increase |
| Direction | SHORT | Red | Expecting price decrease |
| Status | Open | Yellow | Position still active |
| Status | Closed | Gray | Position completed |
| Result | Win | Green | Closed with profit |
| Result | Loss | Red | Closed with loss |
| Result | Break-even | Yellow | Closed at or near entry |

Note: The color associations are intentionally consistent. Green always represents favorable or bullish conditions (Long direction, winning result). Red always represents bearish or unfavorable conditions (Short direction, losing result). Yellow indicates a neutral or pending state (Open status, Break-even result).

Pagination

The Signals Panel displays signal data in paginated pages. The default view shows 50 rows per page, but you can adjust this using the pagination controls at the bottom of the table. Available options are:

  • 25 rows — For a compact, focused view.
  • 50 rows — The default setting, balancing detail and performance.
  • 100 rows — For broader scanning across more signals.
  • 250 rows — For power users reviewing large batches.
  • 500 rows — Maximum density for comprehensive review.

Navigation buttons allow you to move between pages. The panel displays the current page number and total available pages based on your active filters and rows-per-page setting.

Sorting

Every column header in the data table is clickable. Clicking a column header sorts the entire table by that column. Click once for ascending order (A-Z, oldest first, lowest first). Click again to toggle to descending order (Z-A, newest first, highest first). A visual indicator on the column header shows the current sort direction.

Sorting is a powerful tool for analysis. For example:

  • Sort by Result to group all wins together, then all losses.
  • Sort by Market to see all signals for a specific coin in sequence.
  • Sort by Entry Price to find the highest and lowest entry points.

*See also: Filtering & Sorting Signals*

Tips for Using the Panel

  • Start with the default view to get a feel for the data before applying filters.
  • Use Direction badges to quickly scan whether the system is trending Long or Short on a particular market.
  • Check Status badges to see if there are any currently open positions you should be aware of.
  • Combine sorting with filtering for targeted analysis — for example, filter by BTCUSDT and sort by Result to see the win/loss distribution for Bitcoin signals.
  • Adjust pagination based on your task. Use 25 rows for focused review, 250 or 500 for bulk scanning.

*See also: Reading Signal Results*


Back to Documentation