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Is there really a different set of standards regarding spacings for countries other than America? Or is it just something that people don't either pay attention to or know about?
if my memory is correct APA and legal for example, use one space after a period in order to preserve the amount of paper used.
Is there really a different set of standards regarding spacings for countries other than America? Or is it just something that people don't either pay attention to or know about?
*sigh*
Okay SR, why the *sigh* ?
Obviously you disagree. And this is okay too, which is why we have forums to begin with. Actually I was a one-period guy until my current workplace, where all the other technical writers use two. Now I've been dragged into the mess.
Editing isn't about going off and doing your own thing because it looks nice to you.
I explained to you the history of the two spaces. I even gave references.
But your reaction is typical. *sigh*
Ok, boys. All I wanted to know if there was a difference and what where we supposed to use. In my college English classes, we doubled spaced because the instructor said it was easier to read. Since I'm going to take it as a preference based thing (at least for writing for Lit), then we can all relax, wipe the foam from our mouths, and go back to our specified yards.![]()
Ok, boys. All I wanted to know if there was a difference and what where we supposed to use. In my college English classes, we doubled spaced because the instructor said it was easier to read. Since I'm going to take it as a preference based thing (at least for writing for Lit), then we can all relax, wipe the foam from our mouths, and go back to our specified yards.![]()
I'd also like to know if that article by Mr. Williams goes for both MLA and APA? I only ask because it has some information in it that goes completly against what I was taught in English not even a full month ago.
They aren't articles. They are books. There's a lot of things the typewriter required that we never did before and didn't want to do and don't have to do now.
APA (5.11) Spacing and Punctuation
Space once after all punctuation as follows (bolding added)
after commas, colons, and semicolons
after punctuation marks at the ends of sentences (bolding added)
after periods that separate parts of a reference citation; and
after the periods of the initials in personal names.
MLA doesn't comment on it.
That said, why ask about these two for erotica writing? APA is for scientific writing and MLA is for college research papers.
Erotica would be controlled by the Chicago Manual of Style in the U.S. market (if you really want to be hard headed, maybe one of the British editors can tell what the Oxford says).
CMS 2.9
Word spacing--one space or two? Like most publishers, Chicago advises leaving a single character space, not two spaces, between sentences and after colons used within a sentence, and this recommendation applies to both the manuscript and the published work.
Guess your English teacher didn't know the typewriter era was over. She/He's in good company. Lots of people don't seem to know the typewriter era is over.
And, in case you wondered about Turabians:
4.1.3
"Put only one space, not two, following the terminal punctuation of a sentence."
I beg to disagree, on this occasion, as the appearance of a work of fiction is wholly a matter of the author's preferences.... It isn't a preference-based thing. ...
I beg to disagree, on this occasion, as the appearance of a work of fiction is wholly a matter of the author's preferences.
Or would you, as an editor for the publisher, have insisted on proper punctuation to CMS standard for James Joyce's Ulysses instead of stream-of-consciousness?