ScreenerHub documentation is the product reference for every surface in the app — Studio, Watchlists, Monitoring Lab, Browser, and Community. Use it to find the exact mechanic you need while you work, not to learn investing theory.
TL;DR
These pages explain how the product works, not why a strategy works. Start with Getting Started if you are new, jump to Studio if you already screen, and use Troubleshooting when something behaves unexpectedly.
What this hub is for
The docs answer one question per page: "How do I use this part of ScreenerHub to do my real research work?" Every page is short, mechanic-focused, and deep-linked into the relevant surface in the app.
After reading the right page you should be able to:
- Open the surface and complete the workflow without trial and error.
- Recognise the field names, operators, and table columns the app actually uses.
- Decide whether the surface is the right tool for the job — or pick a better one.
Browse by section
Introduction
Get a working setup in fifteen minutes.
- Getting Started — the core loop: discover, screen, save, monitor.
Core Workflows
The surfaces you touch every research session.
- Stock Screener — turn a thesis into reusable filter rules in Studio.
- Watchlists — organise the names worth revisiting.
Advanced Guides
Push past the basics: tracking strategies over time and sharing work with others.
- Monitoring Lab — schedule a saved screener and read the run history.
How to read these pages
Every page follows the same shape so you can skim it the same way each time:
- Lead sentence. A one-line definition of the surface, written so it is quotable on its own.
- What it is for. The job-to-be-done and the questions you should be able to answer afterward.
- How to use it. Three or four decisions, in the order the UI presents them.
- Common patterns. Named recipes — value, dividend, momentum — with a deep link into the app.
- What it is not. A short list of things the surface deliberately does not do, and where to go instead.
If a page does not give you what you came for in the first 30 seconds, the lead sentence is the bug. Open an issue.
When to leave the docs
The docs cluster is intentionally narrow. Three other clusters cover everything around it:
- Investing concepts and metric theory — what a P/E ratio is, how a dividend yield is calculated, why free cash flow matters. Go to the Knowledge Base.
- Strategy playbooks — how value, dividend, or momentum investors actually approach the market. Go to Investment Strategies.
- Why use the product — feature overviews, plan comparisons, social proof. Go to the feature pages or pricing.
If a docs page drifts into any of those, treat it as a bug — the page should link out, not absorb the topic.
What the docs are not
The docs are not a sales surface, not a glossary of investing terms, and not a strategy guide. They will not tell you which stocks to buy, what a "good" P/E looks like for a given sector, or whether momentum beats value over a decade. Those questions belong to Investment Strategies and the Knowledge Base. The docs only cover product mechanics.
The docs are also not release notes. Recent product changes live in the changelog; pages here describe the current behaviour of the shipped product.
Search and navigation
Every section in the sidebar maps to one of the clusters above. Within a section, pages are ordered by how often they get used — Getting Started before Studio, Studio before Monitoring Lab. Use the search box at the top of the sidebar to jump directly to a page when you already know what you are looking for.
Stay current
Documentation updates ship in the same week as the product change they describe. The publishDate in the frontmatter of each page reflects the last substantive edit, not typo fixes. If a page describes a UI element that no longer matches what you see in the app, the page is wrong — please flag it.
Related
- Feature overview: /features
- Concepts: /learn
- Strategies: /strategies
- Templates: /templates