Typing Spaces

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Which one is it?

single
7
32%
double
15
68%
 
Total votes: 22

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Moop
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Post by Moop »

Baakay wrote:"Definitive" is whatever the style manual says :) Or... something like Encyclopedia Britannica. Or the Modern Language Association. Or... you know. Some huge publisher. Given that I've never heard of webword, I'm inclined to question its authority until I've seen it reviewed elsewhere...
Ahem... 'definitive' means more than just 'the last word by a recognized authority'. :wink: In this case, I wrote 'fairly definitive', because the contents of the article are well illustrated, relatively well supported - and factual within my scope of knowledge. I simply used it to say much what I would say after a fair stint in publishing, because, well, I'm too lazy to type that junk myself... single spaced or otherwise. :)
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Post by aernath »

Okay, apparantly I am of weak back and weak mind. It took me a while to realize the thread meant spacing after the period and not line spacing. Oy. My mind was spacing. Out. :P

I was taught double, but have fallen into the lazy single spacing thing.
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Post by hanaeleh »

How odd... I think I've dated myself as well. X|

*Old feeble voice here* When I was a kid, we learned how to type on the typewriters... and we liked it! There were no fancy-dancy keyboards that would erase... we had no backspace key... we had to type every single word correctly or we had to write the entire paper over... but that was the way it was, and we liked it! Sometimes we could use correction tape, but most of the time you couldn't line the word up right, and so you had half of the letter erased, and the other half was still there... but we liked it! And the typewriters made God-awful noises so when everyone in a room was using them at once it sounded like a 747 taking off while dragging a piece of sheet metal behind it... but that was the way it was, and we liked it! The keys would sometimes get stuck on the typewriter, especially if you typed too quickly, but that was OK because most of us had carpal tunnel syndrome anyway because ergonomic wasn't even a word back then, so we just dealt with the pain and typed slower... but that was the way it was and we LIKED IT! *Old voice off*

I was definitely taught two spaces after a period... always have used this and most likely always will... it's just ingrained into me now. *shrugs* Of course, I was taught with them ol' typewriters... (we had an electric one when I was growing up... we were so COOL to have an ELECTRIC typewriter!!! :emb )

As far as line spacing, please, please, please use double spaces on any essay- my students tried to turn in a single-spaced paper once... I handed it back in and said, "I'm old and I refuse to wear glasses. Make it better." It's just easier to read, overall.
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Baakay
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Post by Baakay »

Moop wrote:
Baakay wrote:"Definitive" is whatever the style manual says :) Or... something like Encyclopedia Britannica. Or the Modern Language Association. Or... you know. Some huge publisher. Given that I've never heard of webword, I'm inclined to question its authority until I've seen it reviewed elsewhere...
Ahem... 'definitive' means more than just 'the last word by a recognized authority'. :wink: In this case, I wrote 'fairly definitive', because the contents of the article are well illustrated, relatively well supported - and factual within my scope of knowledge. I simply used it to say much what I would say after a fair stint in publishing, because, well, I'm too lazy to type that junk myself... single spaced or otherwise. :)
Yes, yes :P ... and I DID say "it's probably is definitive for all I know", didn't I? *thwack* :kiss

I'm 3/4 of the way through a doctoral program, and as far as I'm concerned, "definitive" is the APA Style Manual because that's what the program says is definitive :D I practically break my neck on the keyboard because double spacing has been hardwired into my fingers for pretty close to 30 years. (Borrowing Hanaeleh's "old voice")
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Moop
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Post by Moop »

Baakay wrote:Yes, yes :P ... and I DID say "it's probably is definitive for all I know", didn't I? *thwack* :kiss

I'm 3/4 of the way through a doctoral program, and as far as I'm concerned, "definitive" is the APA Style Manual because that's what the program says is definitive :D I practically break my neck on the keyboard because double spacing has been hardwired into my fingers for pretty close to 30 years. (Borrowing Hanaeleh's "old voice")
Oh, I'm sorry!! If you had just said that you were merely giving literary expression to feeling outdated and put upon, believe me - I would have understood perfectly. :evilblk

(Have I mentioned that I made a conscious effort to break my long standing habit of the post-period double space, for no other reason than I found it a time wasting annoyance? In publishing as well as academia, it is still a considered an absolutely, positively, completely and more than acceptable way to present hard copy. :crackup )
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Baakay
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Post by Baakay »

Moop wrote:Oh, I'm sorry!! If you had just said that you were merely giving literary expression to feeling outdated and put upon, believe me - I would have understood perfectly. :evilblk
That would have required more thought process than my feeble tired and sick body is able to muster at the moment (I still sound like I've been breathing a swamp and my chest is sore from coughing). :-)

What's funny is that last week in class the entirety of the group was just shy of astonished that the style manuals have changed the standards on us. You can tell that most of the class is over-30... EVERYONE had learned 2 spaces after a period and were amuzed (that's a combination of amazed and confused :P) when I told them I had read it was because of HTML removing the extra space like it or not.

Like I said, for us old dogs (woof) "find and replace" is our friend :)
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Post by Cloud »

Perhaps next time I will try it.
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Post by HotIce »

I like to think that this dates my HS, and not me... ^_^

When learning to type, on good ole typewriters, I was taught to double space and that's what I always do now. I don't even think about it any more, when i'm reading something I like to see double spacing b/c that makes it easier to read. That was Junior HS, in HS they taught computer classes... on OLD OLD machines that were a dual disk system, Disk for DOS.... Disk for word, disk for Word's Spell check.

that dates my HS right, not me? :P

and to the 2 people up there who said that they wrote 200 pages? ACK, how?! You must have the beautiful ability to flower up what your talking about. When writing papers, I had a bad ability of just saying what needed to be said and ending it right there.... My papers were never over in length.
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Cloud
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Post by Cloud »

Is there only one beautiful ability to flower up what your talking about?
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The Three Laws of Robotics:
1. A robot may not injure a human being, or, through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm.
2. A robot must obey the orders given it by human beings except where such orders would conflict with the First Law.
3. A robot must protect its own existence as long as such protection does not conflict with the First or Second Law.
-I, Robot (Asimov)
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Post by HotIce »

Cloud wrote:Is there only one beautiful ability to flower up what your talking about?
No cloud there are many beauitful abilities...
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Belldandy
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Post by Belldandy »

I learned it as two spaces if using a typewriter, since the characters are monospaced; Only one space is needed when using a word processor, since the characters are proportional. Drilled into my head by my Introduction to Digital Publishing teacher. Also the first chapter in The MAC is not a Typewriter by Robin Williams. It is a wonderful, wonderful resource! It helps make my papers purdy :D
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Cloud
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Post by Cloud »

What was the second?
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The Three Laws of Robotics:
1. A robot may not injure a human being, or, through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm.
2. A robot must obey the orders given it by human beings except where such orders would conflict with the First Law.
3. A robot must protect its own existence as long as such protection does not conflict with the First or Second Law.
-I, Robot (Asimov)
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Post by duotrouble »

Just my 2 yen . . . I always use 2 spaces. But I do it so I can see the sentence breaks better. It makes reading easier for me.
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Baakay
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Post by Baakay »

Belldandy wrote:I learned it as two spaces if using a typewriter, since the characters are monospaced; Only one space is needed when using a word processor, since the characters are proportional.
Depends on what typeface ("font") you're using. Most are proportional, but there are many that are not.

:P

Drilled into my head by the spouse who studied typography a couple of years ago and just about drove everyone to :cheers by researching things to DEATH and creating a library of about a thousand typefaces. Lord it was annoying /heh
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Belldandy
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Post by Belldandy »

Baakay wrote:
Belldandy wrote:I learned it as two spaces if using a typewriter, since the characters are monospaced; Only one space is needed when using a word processor, since the characters are proportional.
Depends on what typeface ("font") you're using. Most are proportional, but there are many that are not.

:P

Drilled into my head by the spouse who studied typography a couple of years ago and just about drove everyone to :cheers by researching things to DEATH and creating a library of about a thousand typefaces. Lord it was annoying /heh
Tell me about it! Mine has the clear ruler to measure the kerning between the letters and what not. We didn't have a very good computer, so I was spared from the library of typefaces (he put some on his work computer, but not thousands, thank goodness!)

Huh. I thought they were all proportinal. Ah well, I think I'll stick with the one space since my teacher did an excellent job of drilling THAT into my head :D
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