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  2. 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 ...

  3. History of sentence spacing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_sentence_spacing

    French spacing was quite common in books before the 19th century. Later it became the norm for typewritten copy." [8] "French spacing: The additional inter-word spacing between sentences can be switched off in TeX and LaTeX with the command \frenchspacing" [9] "Additional space at the ends of sentences is called French spacing, ...

  4. Sentence spacing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sentence_spacing

    Sentence spacing concerns how spaces are inserted between sentences in typeset text and is a matter of typographical convention. [1] Since the introduction of movable-type printing in Europe, various sentence spacing conventions have been used in languages with a Latin alphabet . [ 2 ]

  5. Thin space - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thin_space

    Spacing examples. The top row is unspaced, the middle row has a thin space between the words, and the bottom has a regular space. In typography, a thin space is a space character whose width is usually 1 ⁄ 5 or 1 ⁄ 6 of an em. It is used to add a narrow space, such as between nested quotation marks or to separate glyphs that

  6. Typographic alignment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Typographic_alignment

    Another example: when the spaces between words line up approximately above one another in several loose lines, a distracting river of white space may appear. [4] Rivers appear in right-aligned, left-aligned and centered settings too, but are more likely to appear in justified text, because of the additional word spacing.

  7. Kerning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kerning

    Kerning contrasted with tracking (letter-spacing): with spacing the "kerning perception" is lost. While tracking adjusts the space between characters evenly, regardless of the characters, kerning adjusts the space based on character pairs. There is strong kerning between the "V" and the "A", and no kerning between the "S" and the "T".

  8. Sentence spacing in language and style guides - Wikipedia

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

    With the arrival of the typewriter in the late 19th century, style guides for writers began diverging from printer's manuals, indicating that writers should double-space between sentences. This held for most of the 20th century until the computer began replacing the typewriter as the primary means of creating text. In the 1990s, style guides ...

  9. Zero-width space - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zero-width_space

    The zero-width space can be used to mark word breaks in languages without visible space between words, such as Thai, Myanmar, Khmer, and Japanese. [1] In justified text, the rendering engine may add inter-character spacing, also known as letter spacing, between letters separated by a zero-width space, unlike around fixed-width spaces. [1]