Your question doesn't really make sense... let's suppose you wanted to ask something else:
Q: What do the wild-card characters represent? A: Question mark represents a single character, an asterisk represents zero or more characters.
Examples: *.c, *example*, foo.?, bar*.???
Wildcard characters
asterisk
The wildcard characters in C programming include the asterisk (*) and the question mark (?). An asterisk stands for any missing number of characters in a string while a question mark represents exactly one missing character.
Wildcard
It depends on where you are using it. Back in the DOS days, a * meant multiple characters and a ? meant one character. I've seen software that says to use *, ?, and % for wildcards, but they were all for multiple characters. So it really depends on what you are using. Not everything supports a single wildcard.
A question mark ? and an asterisk *
Asterisk * and question mark ?
The * and ? and ~ are the three wildcard symbols in Excel.
You need to supply the possible answers you are looking for. In general, * ? + . etc are wildcard characters, along with [] for set inclusions, etc.
Wildcard characters
* - For bulk execution ? - For individual execution
asterisk
The wildcard characters in C programming include the asterisk (*) and the question mark (?). An asterisk stands for any missing number of characters in a string while a question mark represents exactly one missing character.
at least three characters and a *
Wildcard
asterisk **
Symbols that represent any character or combination of characters. The * and the ? are used for wildcard characters.