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Recommended by MLA... but not the AP Stylebook.
Sunday, December 28, 2014
Spacing 1x or 2x after each sentence: A definitive answer from Slate
Innovation, the Internet, gadgets, and more. Jan. 12 2011 6:00 AM
Space Invaders
Why you should never, ever use two spaces after a period.
Can I let you in on a secret? Typing two spaces after a period is totally, completely, utterly, and inarguably wrong.
And yet people who use two spaces are everywhere, their ugly error
crossing every social boundary of class, education, and taste.* You'd expect, for instance, that anyone savvy enough to read Slate would
know the proper rules of typing, but you'd be wrong; every third email I
get from readers includes the two-space error. (In editing letters for
"Dear Farhad," my occasional tech-advice column, I've removed enough
extra spaces to fill my forthcoming volume of melancholy epic poetry, The Emptiness Within.)
The public relations profession is similarly ignorant; I've received
press releases and correspondence from the biggest companies in the
world that are riddled with extra spaces. Some of my best friends are
irredeemable two-spacers, too, and even my wife has been known to use an
unnecessary extra space every now and then (though she points out that
she does so only when writing to other two-spacers, just to make them
happy).
What galls me about two-spacers isn't just their numbers. It's their
certainty that they're right. Over Thanksgiving dinner last year, I
asked people what they considered to be the "correct" number of spaces
between sentences. The diners included doctors, computer programmers,
and other highly accomplished professionals. Everyone—everyone!—said it
was proper to use two spaces. Some people admitted to slipping sometimes
and using a single space—but when writing something formal, they were
always careful to use two. Others explained they mostly used a single
space but felt guilty for violating the two-space "rule." Still others
said they used two spaces all the time, and they were thrilled to be so
proper. When I pointed out that they were doing it wrong—that, in fact,
the correct way to end a sentence is with a period followed by a single,
proud, beautiful space—the table balked. "Who says two spaces is
wrong?" they wanted to know.
Typographers, that's who. The people who study and design the
typewritten word decided long ago that we should use one space, not two,
between sentences. That convention was not arrived at casually. James
Felici, author of the The Complete Manual of Typography, points out that the early history of type is one of inconsistent spacing.
Hundreds of years ago, some typesetters would end sentences with a
double space, others would use a single space, and a few renegades would
use three or four spaces. Inconsistency reigned in all facets of
written communication; there were few conventions regarding spelling,
punctuation, character design, and ways to add emphasis to type. But as
typesetting became more widespread, its practitioners began to adopt
best practices. Felici writes that typesetters in Europe began to settle
on a single space around the early 20th century. America followed soon after.
Every modern typographer agrees on the one-space rule. It's one of
the canonical rules of the profession, in the same way that waiters know
that the salad fork goes to the left of the dinner fork and fashion
designers know to put men's shirt buttons on the right and women's on the left. Every major style guide—including the Modern Language Association Style Manual and the Chicago Manual of Style—prescribes a single space after a period. (The Publications Manual of the American Psychological Association, used widely in the social sciences, allows for two spaces in draft manuscripts
but recommends one space in published work.) Most ordinary people would
know the one-space rule, too, if it weren't for a quirk of history. In
the middle of the last century, a now-outmoded technology—the manual
typewriter—invaded the American workplace. To accommodate that machine's
shortcomings, everyone began to type wrong. And even though we no
longer use typewriters, we all still type like we do. (Also see the persistence of the dreaded Caps Lock key.)
The problem with typewriters was that they used monospaced type—that is, every character occupied an equal amount of horizontal space. This bucked a long tradition of proportional typesetting,
in which skinny characters (like I or 1) were given less space than fat
ones (like W or M). Monospaced type gives you text that looks "loose"
and uneven; there's a lot of white space between characters and words,
so it's more difficult to spot the spaces between sentences immediately.
Hence the adoption of the two-space rule—on a typewriter, an extra
space after a sentence makes text easier to read. Here's the thing,
though: Monospaced fonts went out in the 1970s. First electric
typewriters and then computers began to offer people ways to create text
using proportional fonts. Today nearly every font on your PC is
proportional. (Courier
is the one major exception.) Because we've all switched to modern
fonts, adding two spaces after a period no longer enhances readability,
typographers say. It diminishes it.
Type professionals can get amusingly—if justifiably—overworked about
spaces. "Forget about tolerating differences of opinion: typographically
speaking, typing two spaces before the start of a new sentence is
absolutely, unequivocally wrong," Ilene Strizver, who runs a typographic
consulting firm The Type Studio, once wrote. "When I see two spaces I shake my head and I go, Aye yay yay,"
she told me. "I talk about 'type crimes' often, and in terms of what
you can do wrong, this one deserves life imprisonment. It's a pure sign
of amateur typography." "A space signals a pause," says David Jury, the
author of About Face: Reviving The Rules of Typography.
"If you get a really big pause—a big hole—in the middle of a line, the
reader pauses. And you don't want people to pause all the time. You want
the text to flow."
This readability argument is debatable. Typographers can point to no
studies or any other evidence proving that single spaces improve
readability. When you press them on it, they tend to cite their
aesthetic sensibilities. As Jury says, "It's so bloody ugly."
But I actually think aesthetics are the best argument in favor of one
space over two. One space is simpler, cleaner, and more visually
pleasing. (It also requires less work, which isn't nothing.) A page of
text with two spaces between every sentence looks riddled with holes; a
page of text with an ordinary space looks just as it should.
Is this arbitrary? Sure it is. But so are a lot of our conventions for writing. It's arbitrary that we write shop instead of shoppe, or phone instead of fone, or that we use ! to emphasize a sentence rather than %.
We adopted these standards because practitioners of publishing—writers,
editors, typographers, and others—settled on them after decades of
experience. Among their rules was that we should use one space after a
period instead of two—so that's how we should do it.
Besides, the argument in favor of two spaces isn't any less
arbitrary. Samantha Jacobs, a reading and journalism teacher at Norwood
High School in Norwood, Colo., told me that she requires her students to
use two spaces after a period instead of one, even though she
acknowledges that style manuals no longer favor that approach. Why?
Because that's what she's used to. "Primarily, I base the spacing on the
way I learned," she wrote me in an email glutted with extra spaces.
Several other teachers gave me the same explanation for pushing two
spaces on their students. But if you think about it, that's a pretty
backward approach: The only reason today's teachers learned to use two
spaces is because their teachers were in the grip of old-school
technology. We would never accept teachers pushing other outmoded ideas
on kids because that's what was popular back when they were in school.
The same should go for typing. So, kids, if
your teachers force you to use two spaces, send them a link to this
article. Use this as your subject line: "If you type two spaces after a
period, you're doing it wrong."
*Correction, Jan. 18, 2011: This article
originally asserted that—in a series of emails described as
"overwrought, self-important, and dorky"—WikiLeaks founder Julian
Assange used two spaces after every period. Assange actually used a
monospace font, which made the text of his emails appear loose and
uneven. (Return.)
Farhad Manjoo is a technology columnist for the New York Times and the author of True Enough.
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