The Signals Panel contains a growing database of trading signals across multiple markets, strategies, and timeframes. To find exactly the data you need, the panel provides 7 powerful filter categories and full column sorting. This guide covers every filter in detail, explains how to combine them for precise queries, and shows you how to use sorting and pagination to organize your results.
The Filter Bar
The filter bar sits directly below the header area of the Signals Panel. It contains 7 filter controls arranged horizontally. Each filter operates as a dropdown selector or input control. You can use one filter at a time or combine multiple filters to narrow your results progressively.
When one or more filters are active, the panel displays indicators showing which filters are currently applied. A clear option lets you reset individual filters or remove all active filters at once to return to the full, unfiltered dataset.

Filter 1: Market (Coin)
The Market filter lets you narrow signals to a specific cryptocurrency trading pair. The dropdown lists all 15 supported markets currently tracked by the Volensy signal system.
Available markets include pairs such as:
- BTCUSDT (Bitcoin)
- ETHUSDT (Ethereum)
- SOLUSDT (Solana)
- ADAUSDT (Cardano)
- DOGEUSDT (Dogecoin)
- And 10 additional cryptocurrency pairs
When to use: Select a specific market when you want to study how the signal system performs on a single asset. This is especially useful for traders who focus on one or two markets and want to see the complete signal history for their preferred coin.
Default: All markets (no filter applied).
Filter 2: Strategy
The Strategy filter lets you isolate signals generated by a specific algorithm. Currently, the system runs 1 active strategy, but as additional strategies are deployed, this filter becomes essential for comparing performance across different algorithmic approaches.
When to use: Use this filter to evaluate the track record of a particular strategy in isolation, without results from other strategies mixing into the data.
Default: All strategies (no filter applied).
Filter 3: Timeframe
The Timeframe filter narrows results to signals generated on a specific chart timeframe. Available options correspond to the timeframes used by active strategies, such as:
- 15m — 15-minute candles
- 1h — 1-hour candles
- 4h — 4-hour candles
- 1D — Daily candles
When to use: Timeframe significantly affects signal behavior. A strategy running on 15-minute candles will produce more frequent signals with smaller moves, while a daily timeframe produces fewer signals with larger price swings. Use this filter to study performance characteristics at the timeframe that matches your trading style.
Default: All timeframes (no filter applied).
Filter 4: Direction (Long/Short)
The Direction filter separates Long signals from Short signals:
- Long — Shows only buy signals where the strategy expected the price to rise.
- Short — Shows only sell signals where the strategy expected the price to fall.
When to use: This filter is valuable for understanding directional bias. For example, you might want to see how the system performs on Long trades during a bull market versus Short trades during a bear market. It also helps identify whether a strategy has a tendency to favor one direction over the other.
Default: Both directions (no filter applied).
Filter 5: Status (Open/Closed)
The Status filter separates active positions from completed ones:
- Open — Shows only signals where the position is still active. These signals will have blank exit price, exit date, and result fields.
- Closed — Shows only signals where the position has been completed with full data including exit price, exit reason, and PnL.
When to use: Filter for Open positions when you want to see what the system is currently holding. Filter for Closed positions when you want to analyze historical performance, since only closed positions have complete result data.
Default: Both statuses (no filter applied).
Filter 6: Result (Win/Loss/Break-even)
The Result filter lets you isolate trades by their outcome:
- Win — Shows only signals that closed with a positive PnL (profit).
- Loss — Shows only signals that closed with a negative PnL (loss).
- Break-even — Shows only signals that closed at or near the entry price with zero or negligible PnL.
When to use: This filter is a powerful analysis tool. Filter for Wins to study what winning trades have in common (which markets, timeframes, directions). Filter for Losses to identify patterns in losing trades. Filter for Break-even to understand how often the system exits at neutral.
Default: All results (no filter applied).
Filter 7: Date Range
The Date Range filter lets you specify a start date and end date to view signals within a specific time window. The filter uses a from-to date picker interface where you select the beginning and ending dates for your desired range.
When to use: Date range filtering is essential for time-based analysis. Use it to:
- Study performance during a specific market condition (e.g., a volatile week or a trending month).
- Compare signal outcomes across different time periods.
- Focus on recent signals by setting a start date to the last 7 or 30 days.
- Review historical performance for a specific quarter or month.
Default: All dates (no filter applied).
Combining Filters
Filters work together using AND logic. When you apply multiple filters, the panel shows only signals that match all active filter criteria simultaneously. This lets you create highly specific queries.
Example combinations:
- BTCUSDT + Long + Closed + Win — Shows only winning Long trades on Bitcoin. Use this to study what successful Bitcoin buy signals look like.
- ETHUSDT + 4h + Closed — Shows all completed signals for Ethereum on the 4-hour timeframe. Use this to evaluate strategy performance on ETH at a specific time resolution.
- Short + Loss + Last 30 days — Shows recent losing Short trades across all markets. Use this to investigate whether Short signals have been underperforming in the current market environment.
- Open + Long — Shows all currently active Long positions across all markets. Use this for a quick snapshot of what the system is currently buying.
There is no limit to how many filters you can combine. The more filters you apply, the more targeted your results will be.
Active Filter Indicators
When filters are active, the panel displays visual indicators near each active filter control. These indicators serve two purposes:
- Visibility — You can immediately see which filters are currently shaping your data view, preventing confusion about why certain signals are not appearing.
- Quick removal — Each active filter indicator includes a clear button (typically an X icon) that lets you remove that specific filter without affecting others.
A Clear All option is also available to reset every filter at once and return to the full, unfiltered dataset.
Column Sorting
In addition to filters, every column header in the data table is clickable for sorting. Sorting reorders the entire filtered dataset by the selected column.
How Sorting Works
- First click on a column header sorts the table in ascending order (A to Z, oldest to newest, lowest to highest).
- Second click on the same header toggles to descending order (Z to A, newest to oldest, highest to lowest).
- A small arrow indicator on the active column header shows the current sort direction.
- Only one column can be the active sort column at a time. Clicking a different column header switches the sort to that column.
Practical Sorting Examples
- Sort by Date (descending) — The default view. See the most recent signals first.
- Sort by Market (ascending) — Groups all signals alphabetically by coin pair, making it easy to scan through each market in sequence.
- Sort by Entry Price (descending) — See the highest-priced entries first. Useful for identifying signals on high-value assets.
- Sort by Result — Groups Wins, Losses, and Break-evens together for quick visual scanning of overall distribution.
- Sort by Exit Reason — Groups signals by how they closed, helping you understand which exit conditions fire most frequently.

Pagination Controls
The Signals Panel paginates results to keep the interface responsive. Pagination controls appear at the bottom of the data table.
Rows Per Page
Choose how many signal rows to display on each page:
| Option | Best For |
|——–|———-|
| 25 rows | Focused review of a small set of signals |
| 50 rows | Default setting, good balance of detail and speed |
| 100 rows | Broader scanning across more signals |
| 250 rows | Power users doing bulk analysis |
| 500 rows | Maximum density for comprehensive data review |
Page Navigation
- Previous / Next buttons move you one page forward or backward.
- Page numbers let you jump directly to a specific page.
- The panel displays the current page and total number of pages based on the filtered dataset and your rows-per-page selection.
Workflow Tips
- Start broad, then narrow — Begin with no filters to see the full dataset. Apply one filter at a time to understand how each narrows the results.
- Use Status first — If you are doing performance analysis, filter for Closed positions first so you are working with complete data.
- Combine Market + Direction — This pairing quickly answers questions like “How does the system perform on Long BTC trades?”
- Sort after filtering — Apply your filters first, then sort the resulting data to organize it in the most useful way.
- Check the count — The panel shows the total number of matching signals. Use this number to gauge how much data you are working with before drawing conclusions.
*See also: Signals Panel Guide*
*See also: Reading Signal Results*