I think you're probably referring to "tick charts", but it isn't quite clear from your question.
It depends what you mean by "with a point".
If an order is transacted at the same price as the previous transaction, then clearly there's no price movement.
On "tick charts", the periodicity of the bars/candles is defined not by the passage of a fixed time interval but by the transacting of a fixed number of orders.
One of the potential difficulties of interpreting this charting layout is that it fails to distinguish between a very small retail transaction and a huge institutional trade. They're each classified as "one transaction": whatever the instrument is, if you buy 100 units, and if a pension-fund buys 1,000,000 units, then both trade executions are effectively recorded the same way, as "one transaction". Charting volume is what distinguishes between the two.