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Subject:RE: To Space or not to Space From:Lucy Connor <lconnor -at- asmr -dot- com> To:"TECHWR-L" <techwr-l -at- lists -dot- raycomm -dot- com> Date:Tue, 4 May 2004 06:59:06 -0400
Yeah, I can back that up. "The typewriter tradition of separating sentences
with two word spaces after a period has no place in typesetting. The custom
began because the characters of monospaces typefaces used on typewriters
were so wide and so open that a single word space--one the same width as a
character, including the period--was not wide enough to create a sufficient
space between sentences. Proportionally spaced fonts, though, contain word
spaces specifically designed to play the sentence-separating role perfectly.
Because of this, a double word space at the end of a sentence creates an
obvious hole in the line." The Complete Manual of Typography by James
Felici, pg 80.
(Please, no one write back that I still use two spaces! It's an old habit I
can't kill!)
-----Original Message-----
From: Karen Zorn [mailto:klzorn -at- zorntech -dot- com]
Sent: Monday, May 03, 2004 7:50 PM
To: TECHWR-L
Subject: RE: To Space or not to Space
>Now, I see in the "Style Guide" at my work, it says to "always place
two spaces after >a period." I am now confused (which is not hard to
do). Which is it? Two spaces or >one? Does it really matter?
In the days of typewriters and monospaced fonts, two spaces separated
the ending punctuation from the next sentence. These days of DTP and WP
software, usually using proportional fonts, the two spaces are not
necessary. In fact, some software allows the user to avoid them.
But if the style guide says two spaces, and you have strict style guide
compliance officers, then use them.
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