text effects
Characters that display on the screen to indicate the location of paragraph marks, tabs, and spaces but do not print are called "non-printing characters" or "formatting marks." These characters help users understand the document's formatting and layout, making it easier to edit and structure the text. Common examples include the pilcrow (¶) for paragraph marks and dots for spaces.
formatting marks
Characters that display on the screen to indicate location are often referred to as "on-screen indicators" or "HUD elements" (Heads-Up Display). They can include icons, markers, or text that provide information about the user's position, direction, or nearby points of interest. Common in video games and mapping applications, these indicators enhance navigation and user experience by providing real-time context. Examples include GPS pins, waypoint markers, or directional arrows.
They are unprintable formatting characters. They indicate line and paragraph breaks for instance.
cursor
The paragraph marker, which is actually called a Pilcrow and looks like this: ¶
A digital screen is a liquid crystal display (LCD) type that exhibits characters such as numbers or letters. Portable computers and digital watches are examples of this.
Pictures on the display screen(monitor) are made up of
The display screen is not waterproof.
No, the screen is a LED display.
Whenever you open a document in Microsoft Word, whether it was created in Word or Works, you can choose whether the unprintable "white space" characters such as end-of-paragraph, blank space, and tab are displayed on the screen or not by clicking the Show/Hide Paragraph Mark button on the Standard Toolbar (the button that has a paragraph mark on it). Every time you click the button, it toggles the state between show and hide. In either case, those characters are not printed when you print the document on paper.
We stop and resume the scrolling of the screen display with the PAGER variable. (Praveen Kumar)