A pointer is not a series of dots or hyphens; it is typically represented as an arrow or a specific symbol that indicates direction or reference in programming and documentation contexts. In graphical interfaces, pointers are often visualized as arrows that indicate where the user should focus or click. In programming, pointers refer to variables that hold memory addresses, and their representation depends on the syntax of the programming language used.
In Microsoft Word, a leader refers to what you will often see in a table of contents where the name of a chapter or section is linked to a page number by a line or a series of dots or hyphens across the page: Chapter 1.....................................Page 5 The line, dots, hyphens etc. are all known as leaders. You can choose what leaders you want.
it made up of dots
Hyphens not needed
An ellipsis is a series of three dots. The dots start right after a word . . . and words begin again, but with no spaces between the dots or the words.
The guidelines for domain names of an email address are that it has to match the hostname and must use hyphens and dots. The name must use letters and or digits.
There are no hyphens in the word ago.
The jieba is a series of dots on a Shaolin monk's forehead.
With a few added commas, hyphens, or spaces, those could be the first 7 terms of the Fibonacci Series.
Samuel Morse developed Morse code for transmitting data using a series of dots and dashes.
yes
Dot leader
dot leader