Are you a single, or two-spacer?

+1

Agreed. Someone should invent some kind of marking to let us know when a sentenced has ended. So we can know that is has indeed actally ended.

Neither. I use tab.

Meanwhile, on my handheld device, when you double space after a phrase it just automatically puts in a period and capitalizes the next word, kerned to proper separation from the period. So someone figured how to work with people’s quirks.

I was taught to double space in “keyboarding” class as a freshman in high school, circa 1982. Much, much later I learned that it’s only really appropriate for monospaced typefaces which I never use any more. I try to single space, but it’s a very hard habit to break.

The board software removes all spaces except one, unless you use the code tag. I typed ten spaces immediately before this sentence, but you’ll never see nine of them.

I thought this thread was going to be about parking.

I thought it was gonna be about Ghetto BMW CV shaft repair.

Two spaces are wrong UNLESS you are currently using an actual pre-1980s style typewriter, or unless you’re using particular software that is set up to malfunction if you single space.

The fact that you may have learned on a typewriter is not relevant, unless you figure I should start my automatic-transmission car locked in “1”, and then depress the clutch pedal and move the lever to “2” at the appropriate moment.

Yes, I pretty clearly know that, as that was the point of that post and the following one where I show examples of one, two, six, and eighteen spaces, and where I say "They all render as one, unless you use the [noparse]




[/noparse] tag."

(That said, I see your extra spaces when I quote to reply. There was only one space in stretch’s post, although that was not the point of my post, but rather that it doesn’t matter, as the board ignores multiple spaces.)

I learned double spacing in junior high in 1976, and I’m managed to unlearn that. I use single space most of the time. I occasionally lapse into double space but for the most part I’m converted.

It isn’t the board software cutting out the spaces, it’s your own browser and it’s doing it on all webpages you view. It’s part of the HTML standard for how a browser should render things when displaying a proportional font. We’ve had this discussion before.

Learned double space in high school typing, and have never bothered to try to retrain myself - it really doesn’t make a difference, does it?

I use two spaces so I don’t have to remember not to.

Huh. I graduated in 1991 and was taught to double space after a period. I guess my school was more right than yours! (Gloat, gloat, gloat) :stuck_out_tongue:

Always two spaces.

Two spaces was always intended for one purpose and one purpose only: articles typed on a typewriter and presented doubled-spaced on paper. Nobody else in the world ever used double spaces. That included all books, and newspapers, and magazines, and journals, and catalogs, and brochures, and graffiti. Not even the very old British style of putting a space before punctuation (as in ; or .) committed the lunacy of adding a second space after the period.

As soon as the idiocy of manually producing typed paper copies of anything disappeared, the idiocy of double spaces should have instantly disappeared.

I got my first typewriter over 50 years ago so I spent decades in the paper nightmare. Monospaced typefaces are the devil’s diarrhea. Computers are wonderful. I thought so the first time I used one, and I continue to think so today.

There is simply no objective excuse for ever using a monospaced typefont or double spaces in today’s world.

No, I don’t have a strong opinion on this. Why do you ask?

Nobody ever taught me to type, so nobody ever told me how many spaces to use. So I’ve just always used one space, because that was what came naturally.

If we were meant to double space, why wouldn’t they just make a single space twice as long?

I never took typing lessons, and it never occurred to me to double space after a period.

And FWIW the text in this thread all looks like it’s spaced exactly the same, whether you claimed you single or double spaced. Double spacing would just add a step that is noticed by no one, and ain’t nobody got time for that. So I’m staying firmly in the single space camp.

I doubled all through school. My first job out of college was as a reporter. My editor cured me of the double space right quick.