Sentence Spacing

Caporegime
Joined
29 Aug 2007
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Auckland
Sentence spacing is something that I almost never think about. Everyone knows that you double space after a full stop and begin your fresh sentence feeling clean and correct. However, in a hot take that I did not see coming, Wiki tells us that:

Sentence spacing is the horizontal space between sentences in typeset text. It is a matter of typographical convention.[1] Since the introduction of movable-type printing in Europe, various sentence spacing conventions have been used in languages with a Latin alphabet.[2] These include a normal word space (as between the words in a sentence), a single enlarged space, and two full spaces.

Until the 20th century, publishing houses and printers in many countries used additional space between sentences. There were exceptions to this traditional spacing method—some printers used spacing between sentences that was no wider than word spacing.[3] This was French spacing—a term synonymous with single-space sentence spacing until the late 20th century.[4]With the introduction of the typewriter in the late 19th century, typists used two spaces between sentences to mimic the style used by traditional typesetters.[5] While wide sentence spacing was phased out in the printing industry in the mid-20th century, the practice continued on typewriters[6] and later on computers.[7] Perhaps because of this, many modern sources now incorrectly[3] claim that wide spacing was created for the typewriter.[8]

The desired or correct sentence spacing is often debated but many sources now say additional space is not necessary or desirable.[9] From around 1950, single sentence spacing became standard in books, magazines and newspapers,[10] and the majority of style guides that use a Latin-derived alphabet as a language base now prescribe or recommend the use of a single space after the concluding punctuation of a sentence.[11] However, some sources still state that additional spacing is correct or acceptable. The debate continues.[3] Many people prefer double sentence spacing for informal use because that was how they were taught to type.[12] There is a debate on which convention is more readable; the few recent direct studies conducted since 2002 have produced inconclusive results.[13]"


Having talked to some Youths recently, it's my understanding that they find a single space acceptable. I also read that some versions of Word will auto-correct an already correctly used double space to an incorrect single space! Some web sites on that internet also do this but not, I think, this one.

e: It appears I'm wrong on this point as later posters have tested and sadly OCUK does resort to single space!

What say you? Are you a successful single or a doubtful double user?
 
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I've always double spaced since I got an outstanding grade C in GCSE Keyboarding Application at school in 1994! But single space is fine as well, research shows that neither has an advantage for readability so whatever you're used to.

It did however cause a kerfuffle when I submitted my dissertation fully double spaced and the blind cross marker tried to down mark me for it. Went to academic standards board and everything (I won).
 
Always enter a single space only. Sentence spacing is a display preference separate from content.
 
Testing spacing. Testing spacing.
Testing spacing. Testing spacing.

Double spacing looks ridiculous. I've always only single spaced, and I've managed to stay pretty amazing so far.

:edit: Ha, double spacing works on the preview window and when editing, but not after posting. Says it all, OcUK can't display double spaces so there's your answer :p
 
theonlyreasonwhyyouneedspacesbetweenwordsisbecauseyourbrainwillhavetroublereadingacontinuoustextespeciallyifyoustartputtingsomeacronymsinthenyouwillgetreallyconfused

FYI this forum auto-corrects removing the double space :)
 
Didn’t even notice the difference till I checked for it after your post, either says a lot about me or that single/double spacing makes little difference when reading.
 
It was drummed into me back in the day (tech college in the nineties); to always double space whenever starting a new sentence, which has habitually stuck to this day.

A practice long since considered obsolete.
 
I was taught to double space, so I did. I recently switched to single spacing. I don't care either way, since it makes no difference to how readable the text is.
 
Was never taught to double space. Will be hitting 40 soon so must have either been before my time or something that was trialled for a bit.
 
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