Plus Sign
U+002B
As a plain text character, the + plus sign is most useful for additions, plans, feature lists where quick compatibility matters.
Open symbol pageBullet Symbols Collection
Bullet symbols are used for lists, profile formatting, note-taking, separators, resumes, menus, and compact text organization. This version groups characters that work well in titles, section headers, cards, menus, and content blocks where the symbol should frame or emphasize text.
18 symbols in this collection
People search for bullets when they want structure without adding full visual components. A single text symbol can make messy copy feel immediately more deliberate. Heading-oriented routes need symbols with enough visual presence to support a title without turning the line into decoration for its own sake.
These characters show up in bios, resumes, schedules, menu text, feature lists, agenda notes, and profile sections where clean separation matters. They are useful in docs, social posts, menu labels, feature cards, guides, and stylized content blocks where a small symbol improves scanability.
A strong bullet page mixes dots, triangles, hyphen-like bullets, and small separators because users often test multiple visual weights before deciding. The best heading symbols feel intentional at the start or end of a line and still hold up when repeated across a full page or content cluster.
U+002B
As a plain text character, the + plus sign is most useful for additions, plans, feature lists where quick compatibility matters.
Open symbol pageU+002F
The / forward slash appears in everyday text whenever someone wants a direct character for paths, paired options, date-style text instead of a more decorative symbol.
Open symbol pageU+005F
As a plain text character, the _ underscore is most useful for usernames, code variables, word separators where quick compatibility matters.
Open symbol pageU+007C
The | vertical bar is a practical ascii symbol people use for separators, menus, minimal layouts in plain text.
Open symbol pageThe ❥ rotated heavy black heart bullet works as a cleaner visual mark for signature lines, cute text decoration, romantic formatting than a full emoji treatment.
Open symbol pageU+25CB
The ○ white circle sits in the useful middle ground between plain punctuation and emoji, especially for status dots, minimal bullets, outline markers.
Open symbol pageU+25CF
The ● black circle works as a cleaner visual mark for filled bullets, status markers, simple layout icons than a full emoji treatment.
Open symbol pageU+25A0
Many people use the ■ black square when they want filled markers, simple legend symbols, layout bullets to read as text styling rather than emoji decoration.
Open symbol pageU+25C7
Many people use the ◇ white diamond when they want outline decoration, clean separators, light icon sets to read as text styling rather than emoji decoration.
Open symbol pageU+25C6
Many people use the ◆ black diamond when they want filled markers, section dividers, feature bullets to read as text styling rather than emoji decoration.
Open symbol pageU+25C9
For focus markers, targets, highlight dots, the ◉ fisheye gives a text-first look that stays more neutral than emoji presentation.
Open symbol pageU+2022
The • bullet tends to show up in plain text whenever list formatting, profile separators, short notes need more structure or visual direction.
Open symbol pageU+2023
The ‣ triangular bullet tends to show up in plain text whenever structured lists, guide callouts, section markers need more structure or visual direction.
Open symbol pageU+2043
Users usually reach for the ⁃ hyphen bullet in workflows involving minimal lists, plain text outlines, notes because it keeps the layout readable and copy-ready.
Open symbol pageU+2219
Users usually reach for the ∙ bullet operator in workflows involving tiny separators, math-adjacent text, compact bulleting because it keeps the layout readable and copy-ready.
Open symbol pageU+2027
The ‧ hyphenation point tends to show up in plain text whenever small separators, light profile styling, compact dividers need more structure or visual direction.
Open symbol pageU+2025
The ‥ two dot leader tends to show up in plain text whenever compact pauses, light separators, stylized text need more structure or visual direction.
Open symbol pageU+00A6
This broken bar is most useful in text-heavy layouts built around light separators, technical notation, structured text where the character has to do real visual work.
Open symbol pageBullet symbols are used for lists, profile formatting, note-taking, separators, resumes, menus, and compact text organization. This version focuses on copy-and-paste intent, where visitors want a ready list they can use immediately without browsing technical tables.
Bullet symbols are used for lists, profile formatting, note-taking, separators, resumes, menus, and compact text organization. This route is tuned for bio and profile styling, where users want symbols that look clean, expressive, and easy to combine with short personal text.
Bullet symbols are used for lists, profile formatting, note-taking, separators, resumes, menus, and compact text organization. This route focuses on symbols that look natural around display names, usernames, alt accounts, and fan handles.
Bullet symbols are used for lists, profile formatting, note-taking, separators, resumes, menus, and compact text organization. This page is built for bullets, status lists, checklists, notes, agendas, and any text layout that needs repeatable markers.
Bullet symbols are used for lists, profile formatting, note-taking, separators, resumes, menus, and compact text organization. This route targets texting, chat replies, quick notes, captions, and short-form communication where symbols shape tone without taking over the message.
Bullet symbols are used for lists, profile formatting, note-taking, separators, resumes, menus, and compact text organization. This page emphasizes symbols that work in product copy, menu labels, docs, onboarding, support blocks, simple dashboards, and lightweight interface text.
Bullet symbols are used for lists, profile formatting, note-taking, separators, resumes, menus, and compact text organization. This route serves profile-heavy and community-heavy use, where symbols are often copied into nicknames, channel names, bios, role labels, and fan spaces.
Divider symbols help break up text, separate profile sections, structure notes, frame menus, and give plain layouts a clearer rhythm. This version focuses on copy-and-paste intent, where visitors want a ready list they can use immediately without browsing technical tables.