Bullet Symbols Patterns

Bullet Symbols for Headings and Sections

Bullet Symbols in this collection are grouped for headings and sections, with a focus on copy-ready characters that solve a clear text problem.

16 symbols in this page

Why this page exists

Bullet pages are reliable because the user problem is simple: make text scan better. That makes this one of the safest symbol clusters for scaling. Heading-focused pages work when the symbols can frame or emphasize text without overwhelming the title itself.

These characters are useful for resumes, notes, agendas, menus, bios, FAQs, settings lists, profile stacks, and text-only layouts. This pattern is useful for cards, menus, feature blocks, docs, social slides, templates, and page sections that need a visible opener or closer.

The main value is not a single bullet but the range from tiny separators to stronger list markers, which lets the user match tone and density. The best heading marks are consistent enough to repeat across a page while still giving each block a little more presence.

Symbols in this collection

/
ASCII symbols

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.

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_
ASCII symbols

As a plain text character, the _ underscore is most useful for usernames, code variables, word separators where quick compatibility matters.

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|
ASCII symbols

The | vertical bar is a practical ascii symbol people use for separators, menus, minimal layouts in plain text.

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Unicode symbols

The ○ white circle sits in the useful middle ground between plain punctuation and emoji, especially for status dots, minimal bullets, outline markers.

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Unicode symbols

The ● black circle works as a cleaner visual mark for filled bullets, status markers, simple layout icons than a full emoji treatment.

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Unicode symbols

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.

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Unicode symbols

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.

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Unicode symbols

Many people use the ◆ black diamond when they want filled markers, section dividers, feature bullets to read as text styling rather than emoji decoration.

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Bullet

U+2022

Text symbols

The • bullet tends to show up in plain text whenever list formatting, profile separators, short notes need more structure or visual direction.

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Text symbols

The ‣ triangular bullet tends to show up in plain text whenever structured lists, guide callouts, section markers need more structure or visual direction.

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Text symbols

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.

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Text symbols

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.

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Text symbols

The ‧ hyphenation point tends to show up in plain text whenever small separators, light profile styling, compact dividers need more structure or visual direction.

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Text symbols

The ‥ two dot leader tends to show up in plain text whenever compact pauses, light separators, stylized text need more structure or visual direction.

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¦
Text symbols

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.

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