• In the Edit menu of Mac applications will be found a Special Characters option
⁂ This will provide you with access to all the fancy characters available from your installed fonts
⌘ These can be dragged and dropped into your text editing application as required
⎈ or the codes can be used for embedding in a rich text page
• If there is a flag on the menu bar clicking on the flag may offer the option to show the keyboard viewer. If not available this can be activated from the Input Sources tab of the Language & Text section of System Preferences
• The keyboard viewer will show which characters are available from the keyboard when pressing the Alt key, the Alt and Shift key together etc.
• From this it will be noted that in most fonts the Alt and 8 key provide a standard filled bullet point
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demoting
It all depends on the type of bullet and type of armour. A 5.56 armour piecing round will penetrate light armour - like that found on Russian APC's but will just "ping" off of a tank. A normal soft point or hollow point will just deform on all armour.
Jacketed hollow point.
A bullet point
.380 auto ammunition can be a "ball" style bullet or metal jacketed hollow point.
what type bullet in 50 cal
If you assume both bullets are stable and flying point forward, the spinning bullet will have more drag; HOWEVER, the whole purpose of spinning the bullet is to keep it stable and point forward. If you do not do this, the bullet yaws and wobbles wildly drammatically increasing the drag. Therefore, in actual practice, the spinning bullet has less drag because it remains stable and point forward whereas the unspun bullet is unstable and wobbles/tumbles.
No, typically a full stop is not used at the end of a bullet point unless the bullet point is a complete sentence. If each bullet point is a complete sentence, then it's appropriate to use a full stop at the end.
adam
Yes you should do.
Adam
Adam