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I'm not going to get into the debate over one-vs.-two, as that will generate
a loooong thread, but I'll explain about the fonts. If you have ever used a typewriter, most likely the text you produced was monospaced; that is, every letter was the same width. Typewriter typefaces are designed so that they don't look too weird with an i or l (or period) the same width as an m or w, but the result is certainly distinguishable from a printed book. Print typefaces have always been proportional; that is, the type character was only as wide as necessary for the letter, so some chunks of type are wider than others. Some typewriters could also produce proportional type, but they were in a significant minority. The huge majority of computer fonts are proportional. Of the core fonts supplied with Windows, Times New Roman and Arial are the best-known proportional fonts. Courier New is a monospaced font, beloved of law offices and bulk mailers because it makes their documents look typed (though why anyone would prefer that is beyond me). Generally speaking, proportional fonts (and ragged right, not justified) are easier to read. Whether adding an extra space between sentences improves readability or not is subject to endless debate (you can also get into arguments about whether serif or sans serif fonts are easier to read). -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "BorisS" wrote in message ... and if anyone can explain what proportional fonts are, I'd be curious as well. My rationale is quite a simple one...the people I am producing this for like to see a certain amount of space between two sentences. I am guessing by its name that "proportional" fonts means that spacing actually adjust? Let's take a real example. If I wanted EXACTLY 3cm between two sentences (just picking a number, and assuming that is what is equal to two regular spaces), how would I accomplish that? Keep in mind, I also have to full justify the paragraphs I write, so I don't know if that'll affect the answer given. Thanks to whomever is providing the education on this (I guess Graham?). -- Boris "Tony Jollans" wrote: I have now (long since) adjusted to using a single space but, purely out of interest, what is the logic of this? I understood that double spacing was used to make the gaps between sentences more noticeable. How do proportional fonts obviate the need for this? The full stop in most fonts is less obvious than in fixed width typewriter fonts and the insignificant gap provided by a single space does not clearly mark the sentence. Is it just that proportional fonts are easier to read anyway, and therefore we don't need any extra help, or is there some other reason? -- Enjoy, Tony "Graham Mayor" wrote in message ... And I would leave it with a single space as double spaces were for typewriters and we have moved on a bit since then. We now have proportional fonts ![]() -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org Tony Jollans wrote: I would search for period, space, (not space) - and replace it with period, space, space, whatever the (not space) was. To do this: Find . ([! ]) - that's period, space, left parenthesis, left bracket, exclamation mark, space, right bracket, right parenthesis Replace . \1 - that's period, space, space, backslash, one Check Use Wildcards Hit Replace All You can record code for it if you want. "BorisS" wrote in message news ![]() and replace with two spaces. The problem, of course, is that if I do just a straight period-space conversion, I will include the places that already have a period and two spaces after them (with the find just ignoring the second space in its search). How can I indicate that I only want it to find periods with a space and some character after the space, as the find criteria? And then also importantly, how do I tell it to replace the period-space with period-two space, and then leave the character untouched? Thanks. -- Boris |
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