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The wildcard character is used in search functions to represent any character or group of characters, allowing for broader search results. It can be helpful when you want to search for variations of a word or if you are unsure of the exact spelling.
I think you mean "wildcards" Normally the * or ~ are used as wildcards in search queries.
Wildcard
If you don't have a keyboard including these keys, this must done through "alt-codes" or a Character Map, which comes pre-installed on most operating systems. Search Windows or Finder for "Character Map"; it should be easily available. You can copy and paste special characters from this form.
wildcard, joker ======= for example, in some contexts (shells): ? replaces a single character. * replaces any number of characters.
In many search facilities, it is the question mark (for a single unknown character) or asterisk (for one or more characters).
Go to wowarmory.com and search for your character. Note: This only works if your character is above level 10.
Wild card
Go on runehq hover your mouse over databases and then click on characters. hope this helped.
This isn't something specific to PowerPoint. You use the same method that you would use to create this character just about anywhere else in Windows. If you need such characters often, it's best to select a keyboard (in the Control Panel - you don't need to change your physical keyboard) that makes it easy to write such characters. For example, "US-International". For an occasional use, you can use the CharMap application, search for the special character, and copy-and-paste it (from CharMap to PowerPoint in this case). Or you can memorize the character number, or write it down somewhere, and then use it in PowerPoint. In this case, it is Alt-0225.
Ctrl + Y is the command for "undo" if you like using keyboard commands. Ctrl + Shift + Y will search for the last word that you were looking for as part of the "Find" function. As for keyboard associated words, Yoko-gumi is a word that is used for combining characters.
If you open your character map, you will see that most unicode fonts already installed on your computer have Hebrew characters. To go to character map, go to your start menu and type "character map" in the search box.