drain, scrub and refill..
Ants are not necessarily attracted to your salt system for your swimming pool. However, they are attracted to rotting leaves and other organisms found by a swimming pool. To get rid of ants around your pool you can spray a 40 percent water, 40 percent rubbing alcohol, and 20 percent dish soap around the outside of your pool.
No, becuase the soap can hurt the filter. I recommend using a hose by the pool and washing the soap off with the hose.
I wouldn't. If it was good to clean a pool with, it would be called "Dish and Pool Soap". Pools should be cleaned with materials specifically designed to clean pools - they have ingredients to keep algae and other organisms to a minimum, and they disinfect the water and such.
It is easy for soap to get into a swimming pool, because the people who swim in that pool have washed themselves with soap and may not have rinsed all of it off. Soap in pool water then causes bubbles to turn into suds. Anti-sudsing agents are available, although at some point you may just prefer to drain and re-fill the pool.
This is very likely shampoo, soap and sunscreen
Dish soap!
Yes, it is a dish soap.
dish soap cleans a penny because it soap
dawn dish soap is a oil based soap
Get it wet, look for bubbles. If it's on the outside of the pool where soap wouldn't get in, put a little dish-soapy water on the area (you don't want to get soap in your pool!!!!), and look for a LOT of bubbles.
As in dish-washing liquid, Yes. brands, No.
SOAP