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  2. Sentence spacing in digital media - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sentence_spacing_in...

    Sentence spacing in digital media concerns the horizontal width of the space between sentences in computer- and web-based media. Digital media allow sentence spacing variations not possible with the typewriter. Most digital fonts permit the use of a variable space or a no-break space. [1]

  3. Non-breaking space - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-breaking_space

    A second common application of non-breaking spaces is in plain text file formats such as SGML, HTML, TeX and LaTeX, whose rendering engines are programmed to treat sequences of whitespace characters (space, newline, tab, form feed, etc.) as if they were a single character (but this behavior can be overridden).

  4. Template:Nowraplinks end - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template:Nowraplinks_end

    {} prevents wraps unless the space is too narrow to display the text on one line. {{inline block}} does the same and allows further style customization, but does not automatically add the "avoidwrap" CSS class. {} produces multiple non-breaking spaces (or a single one).

  5. Word spacing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Word_spacing

    Irish scribes first started to add word spacing to texts in the late 7th century, creating what Paul Sänger, in his book The Spaces between the Words, refers to as aerated text. By the 11th century, scribes in northern Europe were separating Latin text canonically , that is, with spaces between words, just as we do today in standard written text.

  6. Space (punctuation) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space_(punctuation)

    Web browsers usually do not differentiate between single and multiple spaces in source code when displaying text, unless the text is given a "white-space" CSS attribute. Without this being set, collapsing strings of spaces to a single space allow HTML source code to be spaced in a more machine-readable way, at the expense of control over the ...

  7. Help:Whitespace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Whitespace

    There will be no text to the right of the table of contents, though an image or a vertical template, such as an infobox, will appear in the space to the right if formatting causes it to require that space. Still, no text will appear in the space in between; it'll be white (as you notice, there is some white space between the TOC box and the ...

  8. Typographic alignment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Typographic_alignment

    In English and most European languages where words are read left-to-right, text is usually aligned "flush left", [1] meaning that the text of a paragraph is aligned on the left-hand side with the right-hand side ragged. This is the default style of text alignment on the World Wide Web for left-to-right text. [2] Quotations are often indented ...

  9. Indentation style - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indentation_style

    In computer programming, indentation style is a convention, a.k.a. style, governing the indentation of blocks of source code.An indentation style generally involves consistent width of whitespace (indentation size) before each line of a block, so that the lines of code appear to be related, and dictates whether to use space or tab characters for the indentation whitespace.