Hi :)
One practical up-shot of this is that when i collect articles for my companies 
newsletter i;
1.  Paste into Writer as "unformatted text and apply styles
2.  Search&replace all ". " (single spaces) with ".  " (double space) but that 
makes some into triple spaces!  So,  
3.  Search&replace all ".   " (triples) with ".  "
4.  Then look through for anything weird.  

I don't have to worry about other ways of ending a sentence because we 
carefully avoid making our newsletter look remotely interesting enough to read. 
 Certainly no double or triple exclamation marks and as few pictures as 
possible!!  A bit like the leaflets made to attract people to LibreOffice.  
Regards from 
Tom :)  





>________________________________
> From: Bruce Carlson <[email protected]>
>To: LibreOffice <[email protected]> 
>Sent: Friday, 16 August 2013, 2:07
>Subject: RE: [libreoffice-users] Can't find setting
> 
>
>An interesting observation Virgil.
>
>When I went to school, mind you it was several lifetimes ago and in the 
>backwoods of the Australian outback so it may not be too relevant to anywhere 
>else on the planet but, I was told to always leave a double space at the end 
>of every sentence. That was with hand writing, before typewriters were 
>invented, at least there were none within several hundred miles of where I 
>grew up.
>These days with modern word processors I just don't bother to even try and 
>insert two spaces at the end of sentences but I suppose I should, it certainly 
>looks nicer and may even be proper.
>It would be nice if modern word processors at least provided the option of a 
>setting to do this automatically. Perhaps it should be the default setting.
>
>(please note no double spaces used in this text)
>
>Cheers all, 
>
>Bruce Carlson
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Virgil Arrington [mailto:[email protected]] 
>Sent: Friday, 16 August 2013 10:29 AM
>To: James Knott; LibreOffice
>Subject: Re: [libreoffice-users] Can't find setting
>
>I got my information from Robert Bringhurst's book "The Elements of 
>Typographic Style."
>
>I have noticed that older books from the 19th century had wider spacing after 
>sentence ending punctuation. Newer books, say from the mid 20th century on, 
>seem to have narrower spacing between sentences.
>
>Virgil
>
>
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: James Knott
>Sent: Thursday, August 15, 2013 10:22 AM
>To: LibreOffice
>Subject: Re: [libreoffice-users] Can't find setting
>
>Virgil Arrington wrote:
>> The typographic standard is to only use one space between sentences 
>> with proportionally spaced fonts.
>
>In the old hand set type (which I have worked with) there were different width 
>spaces (en & em quads), depending on where they were used.
>Typically, an en quad was used between words and an em quad between sentences. 
> The names refer to the width of upper case N and M characters.  So, the space 
>between words was as wide as an N and between sentences, an M.  There were 
>also wider ones, such as double M and triple M.  Typesetting machines, such as 
>the Linotype also had provision for different width spaces.
>
>
>
>
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