a) The dot goes above the function's name, not next to it.
b) I've never heard of \dot notation used for anything other than integration, or for letters of a couple of foreign languages.
[tex]f^{{\prime}{\prime}}(x) = f(x)\frac{d^2}{dx^2}[/tex]
Where I assume, f''(x) means the second derivative of f with respect to x?
f''(x)=[tex]\frac{d^2f(x)}{dx^2}[/tex]
It's easier to understand why this is true, but why rabbit's statement is not, if you think of [tex]\displaystyle\frac{d^2}{dx^2}[/tex] as a function of its own, as in:
[tex]\displaystyle f^{\prime\prime}(x) = \frac{d^2}{dx^2}[f(x)][/tex]
However, since the statement [tex]\displaystyle\frac{d^2}{dx^2}[/tex] is indeed a quotient - be it shorthand for a more complex division than it appears to be - it's legal to put the target function on the numerator.