No, they are not printed by default. They are only used for styling/designing document as a help for you. Even if they are on when you print, they will not be printed.
It is possible in the printing options to get them to print if you wanted to, but this is rarely done. Someone teaching Microsoft Word to people might do this to demonstrate the formatting marks and give the students a printed document that shows different ones.
No, formatting marks such as spaces, tabs, and line breaks do not typically print on a physical copy of a document. These marks are used by word processors to display and format text on screen, but they are not meant to be part of the printed output.
They are hidden known as the special or hidden characters. It is actually possible to print them, though by default they don't print.
Formatting marks only appear in the print preview option when you enable them in your settings. They do not, however, print on paper.
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In typesetting computers or initialising printers yes you could call it character formatting or print formatting
Yes, that's correct. Formatting marks such as end-of-cell marks are non-printing characters and won't be visible on a hard copy printout. They are used to indicate spaces, tabs, and other formatting elements within a document but are not meant to be printed.
character formatting
formatting marks
using print and layout menu
quick print
character formatting
In word processing, print preview refers to formatting a document for the printer, but then displaying it on the display screen instead of printing it.