Wallet Pages, Token Pages, and PnL
Tracker is not limited to chat alerts. The Mini App and browser dashboard also expose deeper read models for wallets and tokens.
This part of Tracker is for users who want more than βthis wallet bought a tokenβ.
Use it when you want to answer questions like:
- What is this wallet holding right now?
- Which token positions matter most?
- Is the wallet in profit or loss?
- What changed recently?
Wallet pages
Open a wallet page when you want more than a watchlist line.
A wallet page can include:
- wallet label and address
- scope context
- realized PnL
- open positions
- unrealized value estimates
- recent trades
- token rows with balance and performance information
Use this page when you want to understand a tracked wallet as a whole, not just the latest alert.
Typical path:
- Open
Watchlist. - Select the correct scope.
- Tap or click the wallet you want to inspect.
- Review summary metrics first.
- Scroll down to token rows and recent trades.
What to look at first on a wallet page
If the page shows a lot of information, use this order:
- wallet label and address
- scope
- summary metrics
- recent trades
- token rows
That gives you the fastest overview before you go deeper.
Token pages inside a wallet
A wallet token page drills into one token for one wallet.
Depending on available data, it can include:
- token balance
- realized result for that token
- unrealized result for open inventory
- average trade context
- supply-based metrics
- launchpad/bonding context
- chart availability
Typical path:
- Open a wallet page.
- Find the token row you care about.
- Tap or click that token row.
- Review token-level metrics and recent entries.
Use a token page when the wallet page already told you which token matters, and now you want the details for that one position.
Token chart
When chart data is available, Tracker can open a dedicated token chart view.
This is useful for:
- reviewing price direction
- checking recent range behavior
- comparing current position with recent movement
Tracker can also provide an external chart link when relevant.
If a chart is not available, that does not automatically mean the token is invalid. It only means Tracker does not currently have the chart data it needs for that view.
PnL command in Telegram
If you want a fast summary in chat, use:
/pnl wallet_name_or_address
or:
/pnl full wallet_name_or_address
The command is best for:
- quick checks
- sharing a snapshot in chat
- reviewing a wallet without opening the dashboard
The Mini App is better for deep inspection and multi-token navigation.
When to use /pnl and when to use a wallet page
Use /pnl when you want:
- a quick answer in Telegram
- a shareable chat reply
- a fast check without opening another screen
Use the wallet page when you want:
- more context
- token-by-token inspection
- navigation into charts and history
Compare
If you want to compare two wallets quickly, use:
/compare wallet_a wallet_b
This is useful when:
- checking two traders side by side
- comparing your wallet with a target wallet
- reviewing which wallet has stronger recent performance
What to expect from Tracker values
Tracker is a live tracking product, not a simple explorer mirror.
That means some values are:
- calculated from tracked history
- enriched from current known balances
- shown only when enough data is available
Why values can differ from a simple explorer view
Tracker is not just reading a single token balance.
It also computes presentation values from:
- tracked trade history
- current known balance
- available token price data
- available supply data
This means:
- PnL can be richer than a plain explorer balance
- some values may be omitted when runtime data is incomplete
If a token page does not show a chart, Actual Mcap, or a full unrealized value, the usual reason is missing runtime data, not missing access rights.