An interpunct is a small dot used for interword separation in ancient Latin script, being perhaps the first consistent visual representation of word boundaries in written language. The dot is vertically centered, e.g. "DONA·NOBIS·REQVIEM," and is therefore also called a middle dot or centered dot. In addition to the round dot form, inscriptions sometimes use a small equilateral triangle for the interpunct, pointing either up or down. Such triangles can be found on inscriptions on buildings in the twentieth century. Ancient Greek, by contrast, had not developed interpuncts; all the letters ran together. When a wave of enthusiasm for all things Greek swept ancient Rome, the use of interpuncts disappeared, presumably being inadequately fashionable. The use of spaces for word separation didn't appear until much later, sometime between 600 and 800 AD.
In Unicode, the interpunct is code point 0183, or 00B7 in hexadecimal. The HTML entity for an interpunct is ·. See also "Similar symbols", below.
In some word processors, interpuncts are used to denote either hard space or space characters.
In Chinese, the middle dot is also fullwidth in printed matter, but the regular middle dot (·) is used in computer input, which is then rendered as fullwidth in Chinese-language fonts. Note that while some fonts may render the Japanese katakana middle dot as a square under great magnification, this is not a defining property of the middle dot that is used in China or Japan.
Bernhard Karlgren used a middle dot to represent the glottal stop in his reconstruction of medieval Chinese.
In Japanese, transcribed foreign words, especially names, are separated by the middle dot (・) when necessary. This is because neither Chinese nor Japanese uses space or any punctuation to separate words; in Japanese, the mixture of katakana, kanji, and hiragana gives some indication of word boundary. A middle dot is also sometimes used to separate lists in Japanese instead of the Japanese comma ("、" known as tōten). In Japanese typography, the "katakana middle dot" (as the Unicode consortium calls it) has a fixed width that is the same as most kana characters, known as fullwidth. In Chinese, the middle dot is also fullwidth in printed matter, but the regular middle dot (·) is used in computer input, which is then rendered as fullwidth in Chinese-language fonts. Note that while some fonts may render the Japanese katakana middle dot as a square under great magnification, this is not a defining property of the middle dot that is used in China or Japan.
In British publications up to the mid-1970s, especially scientific and mathematical texts, the decimal point was commonly typeset as a middle dot. When the British currency was decimalised in 1971, the official advice issued was to write decimal amounts with a raised point (thus: £21·48) and to use a decimal point "on the line" only when typesetting constraints made it unavoidable. The widespread introduction of electronic typewriters and calculators soon afterwards was probably a major factor contributing to the decline of the raised decimal point, although it can still sometimes be encountered in academic circles: e.g. Cambridge University 2004, and Durham University 2004, and is fairly commonly used by mathematics teachers in schools.
In mathematics, a small middle dot can be used to represent the product, for example x⋅y for the product of x and y. When dealing with scalars, it is interchangeable with the times symbol: x⋅y means the same thing as x×y. However, when dealing with vectors, the dot product is distinct from the cross product. This usage has its own designated code point in Unicode, U+2219 (∙), called the "bullet operator". It is also sometimes used to denote the "AND" relationship in formal logic, due to the relationship between these two operations.
In chemistry, the middle dot is used to separate the parts of formulas of addition compounds, mixture salts or solvates (mostly hydrates), such as of copper(II) sulfate pentahydrate, CuSO4·5H2O.
| Symbol | Character Entity | Numeric Entity | Unicode Code Point | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| · | ·
| ·
| U+00B7
| interpunct, middle dot |
| ⋅ | ⋅
| ⋅
| U+22C5
| dot operator (mathematics) |
| • | •
| •
| U+2022
| bullet, often used to mark list items |
| ‧ | ‧
| U+2027
| hyphenation point | |
| ・ | ・
| U+30FB
| fullwidth katakana middle dot | |
| ・ | ・
| U+FF65
| halfwidth katakana middle dot | |
| ּ | ּ
| U+05BC
| Hebrew point dagesh or mapiq |
Characters in the Symbol column, above, may not render in all browsers.
Punctuation | Typography | Diacritics
Tiong-kan-tiám | Poent kreiz | Punt volat | Mittelpunkt (Schriftzeichen) | Hochpunkt (Interpunktion) | Punto medio (escritura) | Point médian | 中黒
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Interpunct".
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