Structural formulas are used to display covalently bonded molecules in the order they are bonded. The atoms may bond using single, double, or triple bonds. Some structural formulas show only the atoms without displaying the complete structure with bond angles and, in some cases, even the bonds.
A complete structural formula like that of Lewis or Kekulé displays all the atoms and bonds in the molecule. A condensed structural formula shows each central atom with the atoms bonded to it without showing the connecting bonds. A bond-angle or line-angle formula (also called skeletal structure or stick figures) assumes that there is a carbon atom whenever two lines meet, or a line begins or ends.

A structural formula is useful to reveal the complete structure, the order in which atoms bond, and the number of bonds, whether single, double, or triple, provides information on the functional groups and can also explain certain properties.
Related Chapter – Drawing Organic Structures (Part of Organic Chemistry Fundamentals)