1. "Order flow is the volume over time. There's really no other way to explain it. Order flow is literally the supply and demand created by institutions, which is literally volume. So there is no difference. The only difference is what time frame are you looking at that volume."
  1. "If you think back to the context of order flow and stacked order flow, the concept of stacked order flow is how long has that buying pressure been obvious, and the longer push and pause push and pause, the more money, the more capital was committed to that idea."
  1. "Volume is nothing more than a visual representation of order flow and the charts are telling us how long that order flow has been in play."
  1. "I broke order flow down into 2 different dimensions, time based dimension and sector and industry dimension."
  1. "These are really the levels of order flow within the context of the time frame you're watching. So for example, we're looking at order flow today. There's current order flow and and depending on the time that you're trading, you could identify current order flow as this hour. You could define it as today. You could define it as since Monday's opening price. You could define it from yesterday's close to to to the last price today."
  1. "However you define it is not as well, it is significant, but my point is it needs to be specific in the time frame that you plan to place a trade."