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Fontblog Typography Tips

Typography Tip #1. When writing your email, or documents, only use one space after a period. period!

Comments

  • Anonymous
    November 03, 2005
    You should give an explanation for this. On top of that, there should be more of an automated effort to automatically handle cases where people just habitually type two spaces as I do. Word provides a feature to address this, but it is not available everywhere. On top of that, the space between initials should not be the same size of space as between sentences, but my knowledge of typography and fonts would indicate that they would both end up with the larger space that follows a sentence.

  • Anonymous
    November 03, 2005
    Tips are great, don't run with scissors, for example, the question is why? do they slow you down?

    So what is the advantage of one space after punctuation? or is it only full stops? should I still use two after an explanation mark? what about a question mark? what is the benefit of one over two?

  • Anonymous
    November 03, 2005
    The comment has been removed

  • Anonymous
    November 03, 2005
    Here's a good discussion on spacing: http://www.writersblock.ca/tips/monthtip/tipjul97.htm

    They say 'it depends' (definately a geek's answer, that) but that mostly just one space should be used, unless it affects readability...

  • Anonymous
    November 03, 2005
    I concur with Brant: it's not quite that simple and the software should be smarter.

    Both TeX and HTML ignore multiple spaces and force you to take extra steps to insert "hard" spaces.

    I've mentioned this before: http://spaces.msn.com/members/jdanielsmith/Blog/cns!1pRjebUoVh0bNLSJvrecmAEg!339.entry

  • Anonymous
    November 03, 2005
    Some explanation would be nice. Those of old enough to have learned to type in a typing class - on actual typewriters - probably got the 2-space rule drilled into us and it'll be hard to break.

  • Anonymous
    November 03, 2005
    thanks all so far for your comments. Of course we intend to follow up with explanations. In typography when a page is composed, we often talk about the “typographic color” of the page. This has nothing to do with red or green or yellow, it is about how the text forms an overall blackness or even tone on the page. You can see this yourself, by looking at a page of text, and slightly squinting your eyes. You should see in a well typeset page an overall even tone, nothing should jump out at you. There are a few things that help make this happen. The design of the letterforms themselves should be consistent, the spacing between the letters themselves should be balanced, and also the spacing between words and lines should be correctly set for the typeface. Often, with well designed typefaces and good software, much of this should come out well without having to worry, the typographic color should be good, and the text block will form an even texture. When a double space is used after a period, this breaks up the texture and flow, of the paragraph and the whole page, and introduces what we call “rivers” in the text. This is distracting to the eye, and can disrupt or even slow down reading.

    Mike Duggan

  • Anonymous
    November 03, 2005
    There's an old movie about this subject...

    Bill Hill - There is only one space after a period
    http://channel9.msdn.com/ShowPost.aspx?PostID=112

  • Anonymous
    November 03, 2005
    I would rephrase the tip a little more radically. When using anything more sophisticated than plain text, only use one whitespace at a time, ever. With whitespace meaning a space or a paragraph break.

    All occurences of two or more spaces, or a space at start of a paragraph, are a “smell” — they indicate that what you are typing wants to be an indented paragraph or a table.

    Two paragraph breaks at once signal that the next paragraph wants an increased interval before. This is achievable in Word using paragraph styles, and in HTML using CSS, but not in plain text where we still have to resort to empty paragraphs.

  • Anonymous
    November 03, 2005
    The comment has been removed

  • Anonymous
    November 04, 2005
    The comment has been removed

  • Anonymous
    November 04, 2005
    More importantly, TeX figures out this spacing stuff (mostly) on it's own puts an end to this incessant "one spaces or two" nonesense. It doesn't matter if you like one space or two after your "."s at the end of a sentence, TeX is fine with either.

    TeX does give you ways to indicate less then a full sentence-ending space: for example "Mr.~Smith" instead of "Mr. Smith".

    Why should users (old typing) habits have to change to match the software?

  • Anonymous
    November 04, 2005
    >Wrong. Wrong. Wrong!
    >Wider spaces between sentences help disambiguate.

    This seems like an unconventional opinion that should be very easy to prove or disprove, by presenting the same text with narrow and wide spaces and measuring comprehension. Kevin - any evidence for or against wider spacing?

  • Anonymous
    November 04, 2005
    I suppose the other point is that in the olden days compositors would use the wide range of spaces available to them in metal type: hair spaces, em, en and a bunch of others too. These spaces are in Unicode, although not in many fonts. However, I doubt that if they were in all fonts they'd get used very often today.

  • Anonymous
    November 04, 2005
    So after thinking about this, I shouldn't have used "unconventional" in the post above. Still interest in research to back up the wider space improves reading theory.

    Si

  • Anonymous
    November 06, 2005
    > Wrong. Wrong. Wrong!

    Adrian, I admire your passion (typography should indeed be a passionate subject) but I am unconvinced that adding an extra space in the sentence - "hurry!" Jack Yelled. - gets rid of ambiguity. If anywhere, the ambiguity exists in the writing.

    The notion of a wider space is not unappealing but the key here is not at the expense of balancing all of the other objectives of clear, legible type. Indeed as Si points out, professional typesetters of the past used an armory of different spaces in this service. The sad truth is that we are surrounded by examples of poorly executed typesetting. I guess hard rule making is difficult where understanding and judgment is the real answer.

  • Anonymous
    November 07, 2005
    I can't speak for Adrian, but I think I'd add "...all other things being equal..." to his comments.

    Sure, the example is contrived; and yes, the writing itself should be changed. But in the context of "one space or two", it shows that there can be a semantic difference. And that the hard-and-fast rule that started this whole discussion is just plain wrong.

  • Anonymous
    November 07, 2005
    Which font is this blog in? It's unbelievebul!

  • Anonymous
    November 07, 2005
    The font for this blog is Candara, one of the new ClearType fonts for Windows Vista and the new version of Office. See the blog posting http://blogs.msdn.com/fontblog/archive/2005/10/19/482839.aspx for further details.

    Greg

  • Anonymous
    February 28, 2006
    The comment has been removed

  • Anonymous
    June 20, 2006
    > Wrong. Wrong. Wrong!

    >"French spacing" (where the space between sentences is no larger than the space between words)

    Is it really? Does your software not add a bit of space to the end-of-sentence period? Maybe you should get something better, then.

  • Anonymous
    January 07, 2007
    The comment has been removed

  • Anonymous
    October 08, 2007
    So back to double spacing at the end of a period.  Yes or no?  Do we have a definitive answer?

  • Anonymous
    January 18, 2010
    There are a lot of statements of opinon on both sides in this page that are not backed up by references or research. Stop worrying about making claims either way. Consult your respective style manual and use what it prescribes. If you publish, ask your publisher what he/she wants. If you don't have a specific style guide, you can use "The Chicago Manual of Style" or "The Elements of Style," which are intended for general use. They both recommend or prescribe one space. If you feel you must use two spaces because of personal preference, use the MLA writing style. As of June 09, it allows the use of two spaces for draft manuscripts only. If you submit to a publisher, it recommends one space.