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Understanding price movement is the foundation of technical analysis. Every day, thousands of trades shape the price of a stock—but how do you see that movement clearly?
That’s exactly where charting comes in.
In this article, we’ll break down the three most widely used chart types: Line Charts, Bar (OHLC) Charts, and Candlestick Charts. By the end, you’ll know how each one works and which is most useful for trading decisions.
The stock market is open from 9:15 AM to 3:30 PM, and during these hours prices constantly fluctuate. Compressing this huge amount of information into a simple visual form is essential for identifying trends and taking informed trades.
Charts help you quickly answer questions like:
Different chart types show different levels of detail. Let’s start with the simplest.
A line chart plots only closing prices across time.
For example, if Tata Motors closes a bit higher each day, the line will slope upward.
A line chart hides three important pieces of daily price information:
So while you can see the trend, you miss a lot of intraday movement.
This is where OHLC charts come in.
An OHLC chart—short for Open, High, Low, Close—represents each day using a single vertical bar plus two small horizontal lines.
Here’s what each part shows:
An OHLC chart lets you see:
From a distance, bull and bear days look very similar—you must closely inspect the open-close ticks.
Traders need a chart that clearly shows bullish vs bearish with colours.
And that’s where candlesticks shine.
Candlestick charts display all OHLC information but in a much more visual format.
A candlestick has:
This makes candlestick charts incredibly intuitive. You can identify:
Candlesticks are the most widely used chart type in modern trading—and for good reason.
| Chart Type | Best For | Detail Level |
|---|---|---|
| Line Chart | Long-term trend view | Low |
| OHLC/Bar Chart | Professional price analysis | Medium |
| Candlestick Chart | Daily trading, patterns, sentiment | High |
Beginners, swing traders, intraday traders—all benefit enormously from candlesticks because of their clarity and visual power.
A strong understanding of chart types sets the foundation for deeper topics like candlestick patterns, trend analysis, and momentum studies.
Here’s what you learned:
In the next step, you should explore timeframes, which decide how much price data each candle or bar represents.
