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Date:      Sat, 29 Aug 1998 14:16:14 +0300
From:      Anatoly Vorobey <mellon@pobox.com>
To:        freebsd-chat@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: make.conf
Message-ID:  <19980829141614.09323@techunix.technion.ac.il>
In-Reply-To: <19980829123759.B29560@keltia.freenix.fr>; from Ollivier Robert on Sat, Aug 29, 1998 at 12:37:59PM %2B0200
References:  <199808290058.RAA20957@apollo.backplane.com> <Pine.BSF.3.96.980828212840.9718F-100000@localhost> <19980829123759.B29560@keltia.freenix.fr>

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You, Ollivier Robert, were spotted writing this on Sat, Aug 29, 1998 at 12:37:59PM +0200:
> [ moved to -chat ]
> 
> According to Tim Vanderhoek:
> > I usually break people down into two groups: Those who use two
> > spaces after a period, and those who don't.  If they don't,
> > ignore 'em since they hardly pay attention to what they write,
> > anyways.  :)
> 
> You're telling me that in English, you have to put two spaces after a
> period ? It is the first time I've heard of this rule...

Traditionally, an inter-sentence space was larger in English typography
than an inter-word space, but not necessarily twice as large; however, 
with typewriters (which were universal
before computers were invented ;)) this could only be achieved by putting
_two_ spaces  after a period. Nowadays it seems to be not as universal
as Tim wants to put it ;) Anyway, here's the excerpt from alt.usage.english 
FQ:


spaces between sentences
------------------------

   This issue is more suited to comp.fonts than here.  In recent
years, printers typesetting with proportional fonts have generally
*not* made the inter-sentence space any greater than the inter-word
space, although greater inter-sentence space can be found quite
often in older books.  Traditionally, students in typing classes
have been taught to put two spaces between sentences.  Some people
never like the extra space, some always do, and some like it if the
text is monospaced but not if it is proportionally spaced.  The
traditional UNIX text formatter, troff, uses extra space; in TeX it
is optional, but turned on by default.  The extra space, if used,
need not be as much as the normal interword space (it can be less in
TeX, but not in troff).  Advocates of the extra space argue that
the practice speeds reading by making it easier to pick out
sentences.  And sometimes it can aid clarity.  A passage such as:

| "What's pluperfect?" is a reasonably reasonable question that has
| yet to be sweetly but fully answered on a.u.e. I answer the
| questions about Erzherzoginen (Habsburg archduchesses).

is far from clear on first reading.


-- 
Anatoly Vorobey,
mellon@pobox.com http://pobox.com/~mellon/
"Angels can fly because they take themselves lightly" - G.K.Chesterton

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