A little piece of advice: if you just search and read information about trading you may fall in the confirmation bias, because your point of view could be too narrow.
Many authors believe that Technical Analysis, like Economics, are both pseudoscience that look for patterns once the event has happened. Past performance is not guarantee for future gains, so believing you can predict "scientifically" how the market will behave could fall under some kind of magic thinking. To me, trading is more like gambling (although it may be true that you can play a bit with the information available before others do if you are really on the topic all day).
If you want to learn about trading, I suggest you to read Taleb's
"Black Swan" first as he knows one or two things about the topic and seems sincere when he talks, something hard to find nowadays IMO. Don't expect to learn any tools there, but other kind of insight.
If you want to know more about crypto, like clifjw has just said, I would advise you to read Andreas Antonopoulo's
Mastering Bitcoin and other works, if I had read them myself, but I have them still pending.