On Wed, Mar 26, 2014 at 05:15:34PM -0400, Peter Schaffter wrote: > Subject: [Groff] Letterspacing > > I'm still puzzled by Werner's blanket dismissal of letterspacing. > Attached is a pdf of side-by-side columns of identical justified > text. In the RH column, 14 of the 27 lines of text have been > adjusted with letterspacing, some loosened, some tightened. The > grey is clearly superior to the unadjusted column. > > This kind of line-by-line letterspacing has been pretty > much stock-in-trade since the earliest days of standalone > phototypesetting systems, which is why I'm puzzled.
I'm puzzled too. Some discussions I have had lately with other typographers indicate a general support for letterspacing. One font designer even suggested that there is a commonly accepted limit to the amount of kerning or morticing -- unfortunately, I forget what he said, so I'll have to search for such a guideline. For type around 10 pt., I try to keep it around .1 pts. Do others have guidelines? Peter, what were your parameters in this example? Doug is right about narrow columns. I've always assumed that the optimal line length is about 65 characters, typically used in books. For magazine or newsletter columns, I rarely want to set 9 or 10 pt text on less than about 18 picas. Newspapers, obviously, are more like 12 picas (never optimum) and that's where a lot of people end up squeezing too much type on single lines in order to avoid widows. I'm really not interested in setting type ragged any more. This also raises the question of whether a paragraph-at-once algorithm could handle such single-line adjustments without being unwieldly or slow. I've never been able to get this kind of precision in TeX, as I've mentioned before; it's much faster to do it in groff. -- Steve -- Steve Izma - Home: 35 Locust St., Kitchener N2H 1W6 p:519-745-1313 Work: Wilfrid Laurier University Press p:519-884-0710 ext. 6125 E-mail: si...@golden.net or st...@press.wlu.ca A: Because it messes up the order in which people normally read text. Q: Why is top-posting such a bad thing? A: Top-posting. Q: What is the most annoying thing in e-mail? <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Posting_style>