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posted by Fnord666 on Friday May 11 2018, @12:26PM   Printer-friendly
from the BBC-thinks-it's-a-paragraph-break-after-a-period dept.

Submitted via IRC for Bytram

In what may be one of the most controversial studies of the year, researchers at Skidmore College—clearly triggered by a change in the American Psychological Association (APA) style book—sought to quantify the benefits of two spaces after a period at the end of a sentence. After conducting an eye-tracking experiment with 60 Skidmore students, Rebecca L. Johnson, Becky Bui, and Lindsay L. Schmitt found that two spaces at the end of a period slightly improved the processing of text during reading. The research was trumpeted by some press outlets as a vindication of two-spacers' superiority.

Source: https://arstechnica.com/science/2018/05/two-spaces-after-period-are-better-than-one-except-maybe-they-arent-study-finds/


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @12:40PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @12:40PM (#678331)

    Let's test this
    .
    .

    wow! what a difference. . .

  • (Score: 5, Funny) by AssCork on Friday May 11 2018, @12:40PM (2 children)

    by AssCork (6255) on Friday May 11 2018, @12:40PM (#678332) Journal

    Many moons ago I worked at a (US) Federally Funded Research and Development Center, which housed a number of scientists and their 'administrative assistance'. Those poor bastards were basically technical writers, who had to reformat everything handed-in by the eggheads before it was sent in. There was a long, long, long list of formatting requirements they were contractually bound to follow.

    And the very last section basically said "follow standard punctuating practices as outlined by ".
     
     
    So there was this organization, that basically flip-flopped on crap like this (and oxford comma usage, and semi-colon usage, and acceptable margins, and so forth).
    Every time I hear about this, I freak out a little bit - mainly from years of watching elderly divorcees flip out and throw chairs (literal chairs, hurled by a 60 year old woman, who was on her seventh marriage)

    --
    Just popped-out of a tight spot. Came out mostly clean, too.
    • (Score: 2) by requerdanos on Friday May 11 2018, @03:27PM

      by requerdanos (5997) Subscriber Badge on Friday May 11 2018, @03:27PM (#678417) Journal

      'administrative assistance'

      So,

      assistance noun. the act of assisting; help; aid; support. [dictionary.com]

      Is this a euphemism for coffee? Mountain Dew? Diet Coke? Crutches?

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @05:54PM

      by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @05:54PM (#678512)

      I remember complaining to grade school teachers about flip flopping grammar rules. Then you get into high school and college and the ever changing footnote formatting. Not as bad now, but before word processors when you had to perform magic on the typewriter to get it to make special characters at 1.5 lines above and below normal type. uhgf

  • (Score: 5, Insightful) by Grishnakh on Friday May 11 2018, @12:45PM (33 children)

    by Grishnakh (2831) on Friday May 11 2018, @12:45PM (#678337)

    This study is garbage. They did the study using a monospaced font, and then just hand-waved at the end saying "well, it should apply to proportional fonts too". Bullshit.

    The two-space thing only makes sense on monospaced fonts, and came about because typewriters were monospaced, unlike printing presses where the widths of characters and spaces between them were completely variable.

    Now that our computers are able to have variable spacing (even with the same character, depending on what character it's adjacent to), the whole thing is useless: your word processor will automatically put the correct amount of space between two sentences (which is actually more than one space, and less than two).

    If you're writing stuff in a monospaced text file and like two spaces better, go for it. If you're writing a professional document, using two spaces is obsolete and stupid and probably quite useless (many programs will simply ignore your extra space).

    • (Score: 5, Funny) by takyon on Friday May 11 2018, @12:48PM

      by takyon (881) <takyonNO@SPAMsoylentnews.org> on Friday May 11 2018, @12:48PM (#678340) Journal

      This study is garbage.  They did the study using a monospaced font, and then just hand-waved at the end saying "well, it should apply to proportional fonts too".  Bullshit.

      --
      [SIG] 10/28/2017: Soylent Upgrade v14 [soylentnews.org]
    • (Score: 1, Interesting) by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @01:06PM (2 children)

      by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @01:06PM (#678345)

      I prefer newlines as sentence separators in my monospaced text files. Newlines make great separators after commas as well, especially when writing a lengthy subordinate clause. There again, I'm a LaTeX user.

      • (Score: 4, Insightful) by hendrikboom on Friday May 11 2018, @02:47PM

        by hendrikboom (1125) Subscriber Badge on Friday May 11 2018, @02:47PM (#678398) Homepage Journal

        Putting frequent newlines in standard places (such as between sentences and around lengthy subordinate clauses) helps revision control make precision differences. Making the newline wait for a new paragraph makes it hard to see what actually changed in the paragraph, and makes merge conflicts more likely.

      • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @04:29PM

        by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @04:29PM (#678450)

        PDFs often have newlines between each word, or even within words.

    • (Score: 5, Insightful) by lentilla on Friday May 11 2018, @01:19PM (14 children)

      by lentilla (1770) on Friday May 11 2018, @01:19PM (#678347)

      your word processor will automatically put the correct amount of space between two sentences

      Yes, we'd like to think so, wouldn't we.

      Sadly, working out what constitutes a sentence is something we imagine is easy but turns out to be very much harder in practice. The canonical stumbling block are abbreviations, such as "M. Lentilla" - one sentence, or two?

      Or, to put it another way, your word processor might well be smart enough to put the correct horizontal gap after sentences - but it can only do that if it can correctly identify sentences. Ergo, use two spaces - and now there's no confusion.

      Oh - and one more dot-point for two-space advocacy... if; let's say; my publisher demands "single spacing". No problem - that's a mundane search-and-replace. Going the other way; from one space to two; requires manual confirmation for each replacement.

      • (Score: 5, Informative) by zocalo on Friday May 11 2018, @01:54PM

        by zocalo (302) on Friday May 11 2018, @01:54PM (#678363)

        Oh - and one more dot-point for two-space advocacy... if; let's say; my publisher demands "single spacing". No problem - that's a mundane search-and-replace. Going the other way; from one space to two; requires manual confirmation for each replacement.

        No, it ideally requires RegExp support: s/([list chars needing two spaces] )/\1 /, or just working through the limited subset of characters that are required to have two spaces and adding one in, then going back through and checking for instances where a single space is required like abbreviations; tedious, but not as bad as a Y/N on every single space. Either way (insertion or deletion of spaces), you're *still* going to need to do a sanity check to make sure you haven't got any errors like the writer had mixed use of single/double spaces, or ($deity forbid) had used spaces as padding for layout purposes, in which case the swift application of a LART is highly recommended.

        --
        UNIX? They're not even circumcised! Savages!
      • (Score: 1, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @02:02PM (6 children)

        by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @02:02PM (#678372)

        Sadly, working out what constitutes a sentence is something we imagine is easy but turns out to be very much harder in practice. The canonical stumbling block are abbreviations, such as "M. Lentilla" - one sentence, or two?

        In the absence of accurate natural language processing by the computer, the only feasible solution is to have the user specify which type of space is desired.

        For example, TeX does it by using different macros for end-of-sentence versus abbreviations. The vast majority of period-space sequences in English end sentences so this is the default. You can write "M.\ Lentilla" (this inserts a non-breaking space) which is usually correct, or M.~Lentilla if the situation calls for a breaking space.

        • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @02:17PM (4 children)

          by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @02:17PM (#678383)

          > You can write "M.\ Lentilla" (this inserts a non-breaking space) which is usually correct, or M.~Lentilla if the situation calls for a breaking space.

          It's the opposite, "~" is the non-breaking space.

          • (Score: 2) by hendrikboom on Friday May 11 2018, @02:52PM (3 children)

            by hendrikboom (1125) Subscriber Badge on Friday May 11 2018, @02:52PM (#678401) Homepage Journal

            Let me ask the TeX experts. What do you do if you want your document to contain a symmetrical double quote? Like the ASCII double quote. TeX seems to convert them to an asymmetrical one.

            • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @03:49PM

              by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @03:49PM (#678427)

              Search around for TeX "straight quotes" or "dumb quotes". I got a few results, but there doesn't seem to be a "canonical" way, everyone seems to have their own, and it's always clumsy to use and/or has some caveats. The best I've seen seems to be the macro "\textquotedbl", but the required includes mess with some other stuff.

            • (Score: 2) by melikamp on Friday May 11 2018, @06:46PM (1 child)

              by melikamp (1886) on Friday May 11 2018, @06:46PM (#678522) Journal
              ``like that''

              • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @08:52PM

                by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @08:52PM (#678566)

                That is the preferred way to get asymmetrical, "smart" quotes, literally the opposite of what GP asked for :)

        • (Score: 4, Insightful) by DeathMonkey on Friday May 11 2018, @05:35PM

          by DeathMonkey (1380) on Friday May 11 2018, @05:35PM (#678500) Journal

          That's way easier than just hitting the biggest button on the keyboard twice!

      • (Score: 2) by tangomargarine on Friday May 11 2018, @02:49PM (2 children)

        by tangomargarine (667) on Friday May 11 2018, @02:49PM (#678400)

        I wonder whether the tendency of people to drop the last period in acronyms (A.P.A) is related to this? Or if it's just a stylistic thing that artists like to put on album covers and the mimics can't be bothered to do it the right way.

        And then there's the whole double period thing, too. No, not an ellipsis: *two* periods at the end of a sentence. Just an online thing with the young'uns, I think.. Of course it's totally impossible to do a search on it to figure out whether it's supposed to mean something, but I heard somewhere that it's supposed to indicate that the sentence is particularly insightful and worthy of attention? Typical self-centered overly-confident millennial thing, maybe.

        --
        "Is that really true?" "I just spent the last hour telling you to think for yourself! Didn't you hear anything I said?"
        • (Score: 2) by Grishnakh on Friday May 11 2018, @04:24PM (1 child)

          by Grishnakh (2831) on Friday May 11 2018, @04:24PM (#678444)

          And then there's the whole double period thing, too. No, not an ellipsis: *two* periods at the end of a sentence.

          It's probably just laziness and/or a typographical error, exacerbated by the input method (a tactile feedback-less touchscreen, rather than some kind of key).

          • (Score: 3, Insightful) by danmars on Friday May 11 2018, @08:39PM

            by danmars (3662) on Friday May 11 2018, @08:39PM (#678561)

            On a lot of soft keyboards, hitting space twice (which is easy to do by accident on a touchscreen) will give period + space. So they could have accidentally hit period-space-space instead of period-space and gotten an extra period that way.

      • (Score: 2) by bzipitidoo on Friday May 11 2018, @04:25PM

        by bzipitidoo (4388) on Friday May 11 2018, @04:25PM (#678446) Journal

        See? Function overloading is bad! English uses the same symbol for ending a sentence and (in America) for separating the fractional part from the whole part of a decimal number, and for abbreviations and ellipses.

        ASCII mostly copied typewriters, which overloaded symbols everywhere possible. Old mechanical typewriters are worse than ASCII. Often did not have a '1' key. You were supposed to use small 'l' for a '1'. Seems Unicode has plenty of room for distinctive dots, but a quick look didn't turn up much.

      • (Score: 2) by TheRaven on Friday May 11 2018, @05:05PM

        by TheRaven (270) on Friday May 11 2018, @05:05PM (#678483) Journal
        TeX manages to get this right in almost all cases (in English, at least), using the same rules that it used in the '70s. I think the default space size that it uses for new sentences is around 1.5 times the normal space size for the line (which is variable in justified text).
        --
        sudo mod me up
      • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @06:01PM

        by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @06:01PM (#678514)

        Gmail is my word processor. Automatic backup, spelling check and versioning. It's very light weight, responsive and available from most any device. When I'm done I cut and paste into to wysiwyg formatting software de jure, run a few macros and I'm done.

    • (Score: 5, Informative) by AthanasiusKircher on Friday May 11 2018, @01:28PM (5 children)

      by AthanasiusKircher (5291) on Friday May 11 2018, @01:28PM (#678349) Journal

      This study is garbage.

      Agreed.

      The two-space thing only makes sense on monospaced fonts, and came about because typewriters were monospaced, unlike printing presses where the widths of characters and spaces between them were completely variable.

      That's sort of true, but a bit misleading. Hand typesetting did use lots of different width spaces. But the general rule for roughly 300 years of typesetting (from the 1600s until mid-20th century) was that spaces after punctuation got bigger spaces, and spaces after periods got extra wide spaces. One can easily see this by looking at almost any printed matter from the early 20th century or before. Typewriters approximated that rule with a double or even triple space, but really the way it became a standard was in Monotype and Linotype operators back in the early days of mechanical typesetting (which didn't have the flexibility of spaces that hand typesetters had).

      For a long detailed history of all this with historical citations of printing manuals, see here [archive.org].

      Now that our computers are able to have variable spacing (even with the same character, depending on what character it's adjacent to), the whole thing is useless: your word processor will automatically put the correct amount of space between two sentences (which is actually more than one space, and less than two).

      This is all incorrect. Well, the fact that computers CAN do variable spacing IS correct. But there is no such thing as "correct amount of space" -- it's a stylistic choice that has varied over the centuries and by the typeface used. And to my knowledge the vast majority of professional proportional fonts that kern around periods actually REDUCE space, not add it. Unless you're using LaTeX with settings to add space after periods or something, most word processors and design software will use the font kerning settings, which will tend to reduce space after periods (if they modify it at all).

      If you're writing stuff in a monospaced text file and like two spaces better, go for it. If you're writing a professional document, using two spaces is obsolete and stupid and probably quite useless (many programs will simply ignore your extra space).

      "Many programs" is sort of misleading. If you're doing HTML or variants of markup and that actually aren't WYSIWYG in text entry, you're correct. If you're using the sort of word processor that the vast majority of people actually use for basic formatting (e.g., Microsoft Word), it will definitely pay attention to your extra space.

      As for whether it's "obsolete and stupid" -- that's a matter of opinion. Personally, for older "classic" typefaces, I like the look of slightly broader spaces after punctuation and even broader spaces after periods. But most word processors other than LaTeX don't do such things automatically. So, if you like that look but want a quick way to approximate it, two spaces isn't exactly a terrible way.

      But it's ultimately a stylistic design choice that ideally should be made taking into account other design factors (typeface, leading, other font characteristics). Unfortunately computer typographers these days have mostly been brainwashed into believing that there's only one kind of space or even the myths you quote about programs mostly adding space for you... which you could verify they don't if you just look at the output of most applications.

      • (Score: 5, Interesting) by requerdanos on Friday May 11 2018, @03:39PM (4 children)

        by requerdanos (5997) Subscriber Badge on Friday May 11 2018, @03:39PM (#678424) Journal

        This study is garbage.

        Agreed.

        I see, understand, and respect your position, but I am not sure I agree.

        In about year 7 or 8 of his schooling (about age 13), my son performed a similarly rigorous experiment comparing the cleaning power of water+Tide(r) brand laundry detergent, water plus the "Miracle Washball" MLM-scam laundry device [greenfinder.com.au], and, as a control, plain water, comparing their cleaning power on identical cotton shirts stained with concord grape juice, chocolate, and mustard.

        To quote from his epic report, "The Tide cleaned the best. The nothing came in second and the wash ball was last."

        Now, while Tide isn't going to be calling us for permission to use the report in marketing materials, nor has he shaken up the scientific establishment, it's still important for him, and other kids like those at Skidmore with their one-space-two-space-red-space-blue-space experiment, to do these science fair projects and keep the idea of science alive.

        The "study" isn't garbage so much as it is a chance to teach kids to seek evidence-based answers.

        In a post-facts world where the leader of its most powerful country justifies unsupported beliefs by saying "many people agree with me and they're very smart people" [newrepublic.com], this is more important than ever.

        • (Score: 5, Insightful) by AthanasiusKircher on Friday May 11 2018, @04:14PM (1 child)

          by AthanasiusKircher (5291) on Friday May 11 2018, @04:14PM (#678438) Journal

          Well, I respect you, but honestly I'm not sure what to make of your opinion, which I think is likely uninformed in this case.

          If this were an exploratory study in an area that no one had ever investigated empirically before, I might have a view similar to yours. However, that's not true. This is a well-studied area where I'm pretty sure there are at least several dozen previous studies on the topic of sentence spacing, reading speed, comprehension, etc. Many of those studies were poor and/or significantly flawed too. But the rigor with which this study was done was pretty atrocious compared to many previous efforts.

          I'm not going to bother to critique the study, as a link in TFA already has a detailed critique [practicaltypography.com] already. And that's from someone who is sympathetic to the study's findings too.

          The difference between your son's experiment and this one is that this one is being trumpeted as legitimate empirical research in a professional journal. And, as I said, it can't even get away with the "well, it's the first time someone tried doing this, so our conclusions may be preliminary" argument, as this is well-trodden ground.

          The "study" isn't garbage so much as it is a chance to teach kids to seek evidence-based answers.

          The place for that is science-fair projects, not professional journals. I'm all for the kind of thing your son did, and I support kids doing stuff like this. But this is not a study for kids or by kids -- it's ADULT researchers who should know better. And it's ADULT journalists who are trumpeting this study to draw unsupported conclusions.

          In a post-facts world where the leader of its most powerful country justifies unsupported beliefs by saying "many people agree with me and they're very smart people" [newrepublic.com], this is more important than ever.

          In a post-fact world, we should NEVER champion crappy science. Because you know who else champions crappy science? The President and his advisors!! They draw on "studies" that cherry-pick data deliberately, or even "studies" that come from a "faith-based" perspective or whatever. But then they throw out some numbers and "data" and suddenly it's supposed to look like "science."

          That's NOT science -- that's voodoo dressing up as science. It's more important than ever these days to champion rigorous standards in science to differentiate the crappy studies that make headlines every day from good, legitimate research. One thing that's often forgotten these days is that stuff like Wikipedia's standards is what has led to our modern "fake news" era. Because it's not actually "post-fact" in some sense. It's possible, using the Wikipedia-like standard of "verifiability" to find facts that -- often taken out of context -- appear to support your position. But it's just as easy to construct a BS argument using such "verifiable facts" as it is to make stuff up.

          At least the president is somewhat honest about his perspectives -- "I like this stuff because it agrees with what I think, and smart people agree with me." Yep -- that's nonsense, but it's just stating straight out that he doesn't give a crap about rigor. "Science" that dresses up BS conclusions in the veneer of math and respectibility is ten times more insidious and should be fought just as strongly.

          I stand by the assessment of the GP I agreed with -- this study is garbage.

          • (Score: 2) by requerdanos on Friday May 11 2018, @07:24PM

            by requerdanos (5997) Subscriber Badge on Friday May 11 2018, @07:24PM (#678538) Journal

            I'm not sure what to make of your opinion, which I think is likely uninformed in this case.

            I readily admit that this is so, and I believe that our areas of agreement vastly overshadow any minor areas of actual disagreement.

        • (Score: 2) by Grishnakh on Friday May 11 2018, @04:28PM (1 child)

          by Grishnakh (2831) on Friday May 11 2018, @04:28PM (#678448)

          Studies like this are fine as long as they clearly state the limits of the study. No one uses monospace fonts these days, except maybe programmers or people writing simple text files, so it really isn't applicable. If they want to do a study using actual modern fonts, with actual modern software (which these days is largely something to do with HTML as another poster commented here), showing the actual effects and making recommendations for real-world use, that's fine, but it's just not what they did here. They did a study that is appropriate for people in 1970 using typewriters.

          • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @08:59PM

            by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @08:59PM (#678568)

            > No one uses monospace fonts these days, except maybe programmers or people writing simple text files, so it really isn't applicable.

            I beg to differ [soylentnews.org] :P

    • (Score: 2) by JoeMerchant on Friday May 11 2018, @01:53PM (2 children)

      by JoeMerchant (3937) on Friday May 11 2018, @01:53PM (#678360)

      the correct amount of space between two sentences (which is actually more than one space, and less than two).

      Sounds like more study is needed. Who's ready to fund a multivariate examination of the topic: fixed vs. proportional, serif vs. sans, and a range of spaces between sentences between 0.5 and 3 in increments of 0.25?

      In monospaced font, the period is already generously padded with space...

      --
      🌻🌻 [google.com]
      • (Score: 4, Insightful) by Grishnakh on Friday May 11 2018, @04:40PM (1 child)

        by Grishnakh (2831) on Friday May 11 2018, @04:40PM (#678456)

        No, they really don't need any experiment. Professional typesetters have been putting extra space between sentences in books for literally *centuries* now. This two-space thing only came about because of typewriters in the 20th century. Well, no one uses typewriters any more, and only programmers use monospaced fonts (and not for writing full sentences usually either), so the whole thing is moot.

        This is like doing a scientific study on whether a 1920 Ford Model T or a 1920 Oldsmobile (whatever) protects crash-test dummies better in a crash test. Who cares? They're both horrible compared to modern cars and no one drives those vehicles any more, so it just doesn't matter.

    • (Score: 2) by requerdanos on Friday May 11 2018, @03:00PM (3 children)

      by requerdanos (5997) Subscriber Badge on Friday May 11 2018, @03:00PM (#678404) Journal

      This study is garbage....just hand-waved at the end

      In a very, very few contexts, hand-waving is a perfectly valid generalization technique. I think this is one of them.

      Frankly, there is something like 90% of the population with no opinion or preference, and the other 10% is defined by one-spacers and two-spacers. You seem to be a one-spacer. I am a two-spacer*. I think there's room in the world for both of us. If either of us is uncomfortable with the spaceyness of a body of text, there is sed or search-and-replace. Many of the one-spacers and two-spacers get very emotional about their choices. I am happy to see some science, some facts, however meager, come into the discussion.

      useless:...obsolete and stupid...probably quite useless

      Many of the one-spacers and two-spacers get very emotional about their choices. I am happy to see some science, some facts, however meager, come into the discussion.

      ----------
      * And I strongly prefer oxford commas because for me, they help resolve potential ambiguity, have the favor of a more lengthy tradition, and just plain look better.

      • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @03:52PM

        by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @03:52PM (#678432)

        10% seems like a huge overstatement. It's probably more of a 1%, 0.1%, or even 0.01% range. Don't confuse "people on tech forums" with "general populace" :)

        Anyway, I'm a non-religious one-spacer, but I completely agree with you on the Oxford comma.

      • (Score: 2) by Grishnakh on Friday May 11 2018, @04:20PM

        by Grishnakh (2831) on Friday May 11 2018, @04:20PM (#678441)

        No, I'm not a one-spacer or a two-spacer. I made my position clear, but apparently most people are just too fucking stupid to understand anything besides being on Team A or Team B.

      • (Score: 2) by maxwell demon on Saturday May 12 2018, @12:03PM

        by maxwell demon (1608) on Saturday May 12 2018, @12:03PM (#678793) Journal

        And I strongly prefer oxford commas because for me, they help resolve potential ambiguity, […]

        They can as well introduce ambiguity.

        Example: My brother, a farmer, and I were walking along the street.

        How many people are walking? Is it two people (the first one being my brother, a farmer, and the second one being me)? Or is it three people (The first one being my brother, the second one being a farmer, and the third one being me)?

        Now without Oxford comma: My brother, a farmer and I were walking along the street.

        Here it's clear that it is three people walking, since if I wanted to say that my brother is a farmer, then another comma after "farmer" would have been mandatory.

        --
        The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    • (Score: 3, Informative) by stretch611 on Friday May 11 2018, @08:13PM

      by stretch611 (6199) on Friday May 11 2018, @08:13PM (#678555)

      I was always taught to use 2 spaces after a period. (Yes, I am old... at least they were electric typewriters at the time...)

      Ofc, I am a developer, including web development, and HTML ignores all extra whitespace. regardless of fixed or variable width fonts. The last time I read a newspaper or a book, a lot of those use justification with variable spacing to force both left and right borders which can alter spacing between letters as well as between words.

      Regardless of whether or not you type a double space or not, most of the time it will not make a difference in the format that eventually is shown to the reader. The rare times that it is apparent are so infrequent, only the most anal people are going to notice and/or care. (Like the so called grammar nazis;and its not like anyone cares about their opinion.)

      (Note: I realize that their are tags/styles that can force recognition of whitespace in HTML/CSS but I never use them myself, and rarely see them used by others.)

      --
      Now with 5 covid vaccine shots/boosters altering my DNA :P
  • (Score: 2, Funny) by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @12:58PM (2 children)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @12:58PM (#678343)

    https://www.xkcd.com/1285/ [xkcd.com]

    How was this not in the summary?
    Truly, a most vexing omission.

    > from the BBC-thinks-it's-a-paragraph-break-after-a-period dept.

    To be fair, I find BBC articles quite a bit more readable than other newspapers.

    It doesn't work for long articles, but for a typical short news article, I like it.

    • (Score: 4, Touché) by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @01:56PM

      by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @01:56PM (#678366)

      How was this not in the summary?

      Since it is practically guaranteed that someone will quote any relevant XKCD comic in the comments, it is not necessary to quote them in the summary. Indeed, not doing so is a service to the readers, giving them an easy topic for a comment.

    • (Score: 2) by requerdanos on Friday May 11 2018, @03:20PM

      by requerdanos (5997) Subscriber Badge on Friday May 11 2018, @03:20PM (#678416) Journal

      How was this not in the summary? Truly, a most vexing omission.

      Gosh, I'm sorry you were vexed. Here's a diff.

      --- before 2018-05-11 08:26:00.000000000
      +++ after 2018-05-11 11:14:52.894850798
      @@ -1,4 +1,6 @@
        MrPlow writes:
        Submitted via IRC for Bytram
                In what may be one of the most controversial studies of the year, researchers at Skidmore College—clearly triggered by a change in the American Psychological Association (APA) style book—sought to quantify the benefits of two spaces after a period at the end of a sentence. After conducting an eye-tracking experiment with 60 Skidmore students, Rebecca L. Johnson, Becky Bui, and Lindsay L. Schmitt found that two spaces at the end of a period slightly improved the processing of text during reading. The research was trumpeted by some press outlets as a vindication of two-spacers' superiority.
      +Because this may be difficult to understand, it may interest you to know that a popular cartoonist with meager drawing skills (to put it kindly) has published a comic showing stick figures standing around holding signs stating their positions.
      +Perhaps if this is a problem for you, it may help to seek it out and view it.
        Source: https://arstechnica.com/science/2018/05/two-spaces-after-period-are-better-than-one-except-maybe-they-arent-study-finds/ [arstechnica.com]

  • (Score: 2, Redundant) by VLM on Friday May 11 2018, @01:36PM (5 children)

    by VLM (445) on Friday May 11 2018, @01:36PM (#678353)

    Lets cross out the irrelevant stuff leaving us with

    Psychological

    doesn't go with

    research

    the former only seems to produce

    trumpeted by some press outlets as a vindication

    You get better "science" from the newspaper horoscopes.

    • (Score: 4, Funny) by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @04:23PM (1 child)

      by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @04:23PM (#678442)

      Really? "VLM should be the subject of psychological research." They seem to go together just fine.

      • (Score: 1, Funny) by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @08:47PM

        by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @08:47PM (#678564)

        I'll eagerly await your paper entitled, "Effects of high levels of caffeine consumption on car analogy quality."

    • (Score: 2) by DeathMonkey on Friday May 11 2018, @05:38PM (2 children)

      by DeathMonkey (1380) on Friday May 11 2018, @05:38PM (#678503) Journal

      Ah yes, the universe is unknowable therefore my BS is the same as your science.

      I'm pretty sure it is possible to study the lump of logic circuitry that lives between the ears of most humans.

      • (Score: 2) by VLM on Friday May 11 2018, @07:46PM

        by VLM (445) on Friday May 11 2018, @07:46PM (#678549)

        I agree with your second line, but I don't think "the academic community" in that field is rational, mostly.

      • (Score: 2) by crafoo on Friday May 11 2018, @09:54PM

        by crafoo (6639) on Friday May 11 2018, @09:54PM (#678582)

        Yes, but that field is neuroscience, not psychology. Psychology is a mix of crackpots, scammers, and really, really bad statistical studies conducted by people who have no real working knowledge of statistics.

  • (Score: 5, Funny) by inertnet on Friday May 11 2018, @01:48PM (1 child)

    by inertnet (4071) on Friday May 11 2018, @01:48PM (#678356) Journal

    Who need more space during a period? Women.

    • (Score: 2) by choose another one on Saturday May 12 2018, @10:38AM

      by choose another one (515) Subscriber Badge on Saturday May 12 2018, @10:38AM (#678770)

      before

      and during

      and possibly after because that is before the next

      Then there's the menopause, or men-stay-the-f**-out-of-the-way-for-a-few-years

      Not sure what's after that, not sure I'll survive long enough to see it

  • (Score: 5, Interesting) by DannyB on Friday May 11 2018, @01:53PM (23 children)

    by DannyB (5839) Subscriber Badge on Friday May 11 2018, @01:53PM (#678362) Journal

    I learned to type decades ago in high school. Coincidentally, right when I got my first access to a computer about the time BYTE magazine got started. What perfect timing to be enrolled in Typing 1.

    After the first six weeks, I knew all I needed for the rest of my life! Everything else in the class was about the proper form for various kinds of business letters, reports, etc. Boring, but still provided dedicated time each day to practice typing.

    One of the most basic habits that was ingrained was two spaces after a period. And I don't think this was just my typing class or my school.

    I think the one or two spaces thing becomes deeply ingrained early on. It is absolutely reflex to type two spaces after the end of a sentence. So much so that I often backspace both spaces to begin a new paragraph.

    I don't know where the one-space convention started. but I suspect such an obscene practice originates with the same class of people who don't use punctuation or end sentences they probably also don't use capitalization to start new sentences they leave it to the reader to parse where sentences begin and end furthermore I suspect these are the same unwashed heathens who don't want semicolons at the end of programming statements as God intended I have not looked up which verse that's in they might even ironically be close relatives of those who prefer spaces instead of tabs yet wont type two spaces between sentences

    After decades of typing, you, like I are probably a very fast typist. Surprisingly fast, in fact. If you try it, you might astonish yourself and your friends. But with a few errors, more than you'd like because the computer age removed the huge penalty associated with a single typo.

    I've finally got the first laptop I've used with such a great keyboard that I can blindly type at very high speed.

    --
    When trying to solve a problem don't ask who suffers from the problem, ask who profits from the problem.
    • (Score: 2) by JoeMerchant on Friday May 11 2018, @01:56PM (3 children)

      by JoeMerchant (3937) on Friday May 11 2018, @01:56PM (#678365)

      ANYGOODCRYPTOGRAPHERKNOWSTHATPUNCTUATIONSPACESANDLETTERCASEARESUPERFLUOUSTOUNDERSTANDINGOFTHEMESSAGE

      --
      🌻🌻 [google.com]
      • (Score: 1, Touché) by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @04:46PM (2 children)

        by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @04:46PM (#678465)

        Try to explain that to a python programmer.

        • (Score: 2) by maxwell demon on Friday May 11 2018, @08:33PM (1 child)

          by maxwell demon (1608) on Friday May 11 2018, @08:33PM (#678559) Journal

          Or any programmer of a modern language. If you want a language that ignores space characters outside character/string constants, you need to write FORTRAN. Where instead of

          DO I = 1, 10

          you can write

          DOI = 1,10

          ad instead of

          DOI = 1.10

          you can write

          DO I = 1. 10

          --
          The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
          • (Score: 2) by DannyB on Monday May 14 2018, @03:51PM

            by DannyB (5839) Subscriber Badge on Monday May 14 2018, @03:51PM (#679605) Journal

            C      EXAMPLE OF NOT HAVING KEY WURDS.
                   IF IF = THEN THEN THEN = ELSE ELSE ELSE = IF

            --
            When trying to solve a problem don't ask who suffers from the problem, ask who profits from the problem.
    • (Score: 2, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @02:04PM (10 children)

      by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @02:04PM (#678374)

      I don't know where the one-space convention started.

      I guess, in countries where the two-space convention was never ever used to begin with.

      I mean, just because it was the usual thing to do in your country doesn't mean it is the one and only thing to do worldwide.

      Also, it is sort of pointless if you are using any system that does the spacing for you (like LaTeX or HTML). Your text will look exactly the same, no matter how many space characters you type. Often those systems will have another way to tell them what spacing to use (note that in LaTeX you have to do something special if your point does not end a sentence!).

      • (Score: 2) by hemocyanin on Friday May 11 2018, @02:19PM (9 children)

        by hemocyanin (186) on Friday May 11 2018, @02:19PM (#678384) Journal

        Why does HTML ignore side-by-side spaces when it doesn't ignore side-by-side anything else? I can type ttt, or ***, [[[, I can even escape it all /[/[/[ and it shows what is there, but spaces get treated differently?

        • (Score: 2) by hemocyanin on Friday May 11 2018, @02:20PM

          by hemocyanin (186) on Friday May 11 2018, @02:20PM (#678385) Journal

          oops on the escape, LOL. Still drinking coffee.

        • (Score: 3, Informative) by DannyB on Friday May 11 2018, @02:28PM (1 child)

          by DannyB (5839) Subscriber Badge on Friday May 11 2018, @02:28PM (#678388) Journal

          In HTML, spaces and certain other characters are treated as "whitespace" which is a single thing.

          but what happens if I have whitespace on a dark themed web page?

          --
          When trying to solve a problem don't ask who suffers from the problem, ask who profits from the problem.
          • (Score: 2) by hemocyanin on Friday May 11 2018, @10:41PM

            by hemocyanin (186) on Friday May 11 2018, @10:41PM (#678598) Journal

            Meh -- I think it's just a lazy way to deal with a line wrap between two space characters so the first line doesn't start with a space. I can understand why whitespace can be important in a command, script, or program -- but in the output?? That feels lazy.

        • (Score: 2) by requerdanos on Friday May 11 2018, @03:05PM (4 children)

          by requerdanos (5997) Subscriber Badge on Friday May 11 2018, @03:05PM (#678406) Journal

          Sometimes, with HTML, you have to do things that look odd.&nbsp;&nbsp;That is, until they are rendered.&nbsp;&nbsp;Then, they look normal.&nbsp;&nbsp;Well, normal-ish.

          • (Score: 1) by RandomFactor on Friday May 11 2018, @04:29PM

            by RandomFactor (3682) Subscriber Badge on Friday May 11 2018, @04:29PM (#678449) Journal

            No kidding.
            .
            It's ridiculous having to put in other characters to get the spacing I want between lines.

            --
            В «Правде» нет известий, в «Известиях» нет правды
          • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @04:53PM (1 child)

            by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @04:53PM (#678473)

            Careful with those &nbsp;, they can lead to odd line wrapping.

            • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @09:05PM

              by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @09:05PM (#678569)

              Took me a ridiculously long time (like, 10~15 years) to realize that &nbsp; is not just a "space", but a "non-breaking space". Heh. Of course, I only occasionally dabbled in some HTML, but still.

          • (Score: 2) by hemocyanin on Friday May 11 2018, @10:43PM

            by hemocyanin (186) on Friday May 11 2018, @10:43PM (#678599) Journal

            Sure -- but typing out an HTML character code is not the same as hitting the spacebar twice.

        • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @08:08PM

          by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @08:08PM (#678554)

          Because it was authored by hand and that required it to be readable. One line of 999999 characters long isn't quite as readable. And even in case of generated HTML there are still whitespaces floating around.

    • (Score: 4, Interesting) by isj on Friday May 11 2018, @03:11PM (2 children)

      by isj (5249) on Friday May 11 2018, @03:11PM (#678411) Homepage

      I don't know where the one-space convention started

      I would reverse the question: Where did the two-space convention start?

      My guess is it is due a difference in typography and other conventions. European newspapers _generally_ dont change the spacing between letters in words in order to avoid changing the shape of the words. That means that with right-justified margin the inter-word spacing varies, and two-spaces-after-period has no advantage. Differenes in the typeface used, eg. the embedded spacing in a period could also have an influence. Or perhaps the frequency of periods used for abbreviations.

      • (Score: 3, Informative) by Grishnakh on Friday May 11 2018, @04:33PM

        by Grishnakh (2831) on Friday May 11 2018, @04:33PM (#678452)

        I would reverse the question: Where did the two-space convention start?

        It started with the popular usage of the typewriter. In professional typesetting before that, typesetters (like the people who typeset books for printing) put in extra space between sentences for readability. It wasn't "one space" or "two spaces", because each letter had different spacing (kerning) and things were variable, but it was more space than that between words. Then, along came the typewriter, so to approximate this, professional typists (at least in the English-speaking world) came up with the two-space convention, since typewriters had monospaced characters.

      • (Score: 2) by DannyB on Friday May 11 2018, @04:37PM

        by DannyB (5839) Subscriber Badge on Friday May 11 2018, @04:37PM (#678454) Journal

        I'll take a guess that the two space convention predates using computers for text. The convention originates in an ancient dark time of pain and anguish when people used typewriters.

        Ancient typewriters were monospace. I'll suppose the two space convention is a result.

        I'm not against single space (really), but there is no way I'm going to un-learn two-space. For monospace, I still prefer the two-space convention.

        --
        When trying to solve a problem don't ask who suffers from the problem, ask who profits from the problem.
    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @04:24PM

      by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @04:24PM (#678445)

      Coders that prefer tabs should themselves be marinated within a giant vat of Tab soda. Disco music should be turned up to 11 and they should be left to contemplate their sin.

      But otherwise spot on.

    • (Score: 2) by Runaway1956 on Friday May 11 2018, @05:44PM (3 children)

      by Runaway1956 (2926) Subscriber Badge on Friday May 11 2018, @05:44PM (#678506) Journal

      I heard a radio talk show host use almost those same words this morning. They were chatting back and forth, when the gay DJ mentioned that this is the 50th (or maybe the 60th) anniversary of "The Pill" - aka contraceptive pill. The loud guy who talks over his fellow hosts all the time made some inane comment, when the gay guy asks, "Are you sure that you had NOTHING to do with the invention of The Pill?" All four of them launched into a debate about what horrible babies they all were, and that they probably did inspire the invention and the legalization of The Pill. Errr - actually, I think it was just three of them. I can't remember the black guy saying anything - he just kept out of that one.

      On topic - my typing experience is much the same as yours. I took a year of typing in high school, because I had an empty period to fill. Can't remember what my choices were, but they were limited. I thought typing was probably the most useful thing I could do with 45 minutes, three days a week, for a whole school year. And, yes, double space after a sentence.

      For what it's worth, the advanced typing classes had IBM electric typewriters. (Not sure if they were called Selectric, seems they may have been.) Beginner's class had old Underwood manual machines. I think the last of the Underwoods were scrapped two years after my abuse of them, and beginners got the hand-me-down IBM's when advanced class got newer Selectrics. I finally got access to a Selectric II, then a Selectric III in the Navy. Most people today probably can't even envision "carriage return" because they've never seen a carriage!

      Interesting page to pick up some trivia - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IBM_Selectric_typewriter [wikipedia.org] The Selectric was introduced in 1961, so I guess the IBM's in advanced classes in 1971-72 school year were probably Selectrics.

      • (Score: 2) by requerdanos on Friday May 11 2018, @07:44PM (2 children)

        by requerdanos (5997) Subscriber Badge on Friday May 11 2018, @07:44PM (#678548) Journal

        Can't remember what my choices were, but they were limited.

        This actually might explain a lot.

        Back to the typing subject, I do recall that in my high school typing class, the right side of the room had "Elite" typewriters, and our formatting math was based on a 96-character width line, and the left side of the room, who had to make do with "Pico" typewriters that could only squeeze a paltry 80 characters into their line of text. Elite or Pico, they were all manual typewriters, nothing electric, I think because the general feeling was that we should learn on "real" typewriters so that we could type on real manual ones as well as on the electric versions.

        Both sides of the room learned two spaces after sentence-ending punctuation as dogma, not as a way to accomplish anything in particular such as approximate spacing between sentences used by professional printing equipment. They could have taught one space, or four, and it wouldn't have mattered much, but two it was. As a result of this convention, I notice that I have picked up cues as to whether a period is sentence-ending or something else such as abbreviation-ending by the amount of space following it. Habits like that make me prefer two-spacing when reading monotype-formatted text.

        Meanwhile, our old Underwood manual typewriter at home was all uppercase, with no "1" or "0" keys (you were expected to use uppercase "i" and "o" for those).

        Somehow, in spite of all this, I learned to type, picking up the two-space habit under discussion here.

        • (Score: 2) by maxwell demon on Friday May 11 2018, @08:44PM

          by maxwell demon (1608) on Friday May 11 2018, @08:44PM (#678563) Journal

          Back to the typing subject, I do recall that in my high school typing class, the right side of the room had "Elite" typewriters, and our formatting math was based on a 96-character width line, and the left side of the room, who had to make do with "Pico" typewriters that could only squeeze a paltry 80 characters into their line of text.

          Ah, that explains why my first printer (nine needle) had a "Pica" and an "Elite" mode (you can guess how many letters fir into one line for each mode). Before your comment, I never could make any sense of those names (and yes, these days I could have looked it up in the internet, but that was in the 80s when I didn't even have access to the internet, and later the question were no longer in my mind).

          --
          The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
        • (Score: 2) by Runaway1956 on Saturday May 12 2018, @02:24AM

          by Runaway1956 (2926) Subscriber Badge on Saturday May 12 2018, @02:24AM (#678671) Journal

          Heh - you reminded me of an early experience with a Selectric. The military has it's own conventions, of course. I couldn't figure out why my typewriter had only upper case letters, numerals, and some characters not found on typical typewriters. I had to ask the disbursing clerk who shared my little cubby-hole office what was going on. He showed me the little case containing all the different heads, showed me how to change the head, and gave a quick explanation when and how to use some of the heads. I found myself using that all caps head eventually, but most of my work required more "traditional" type heads.

  • (Score: 2) by anotherblackhat on Friday May 11 2018, @03:18PM

    by anotherblackhat (4722) on Friday May 11 2018, @03:18PM (#678415)

    The article makes it sound like "space" was an actual thing placed in documents.
    I know about word-break, sentence-break, and paragraph-break, but how those are actually displayed is determined by the users style choice isn't it?
    I mean, sure, sentence break is usually represented by a period, though it's sometimes a question mark, or an exclamation point, but it might be nothing (like when a sentence ends with an abbreviation.)
    There are even times when it's displayed as a dot before the last character.

  • (Score: 2) by All Your Lawn Are Belong To Us on Friday May 11 2018, @03:55PM (2 children)

    by All Your Lawn Are Belong To Us (6553) on Friday May 11 2018, @03:55PM (#678433) Journal

    As someone (DannyB?) pointed out above, touch-type for long enough and you don't think. You just type. Sentence separators for me are just automatic - I hit two spaces when I separate sentences. The real question to me is: What is the harm with two spaces? (And did they even touch colons? Probably not as most people believe touching a colon is gross.)

    But without going back to the study itself TFA has one of the best lines I've ever read as its conclusion. Quoting the study authors,

    Thus, while period spacing does influence our processing of text, we should probably be arguing passionately about things that are more important.

    Very refreshing from the, "this needs more study!" ubiquitous plea.

    --
    This sig for rent.
    • (Score: 5, Funny) by DannyB on Friday May 11 2018, @04:39PM

      by DannyB (5839) Subscriber Badge on Friday May 11 2018, @04:39PM (#678455) Journal

      Agree. It would be more productive to argue about spaces vs tabs.

      --
      When trying to solve a problem don't ask who suffers from the problem, ask who profits from the problem.
    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @09:24PM

      by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @09:24PM (#678571)

      "The real question to me is: What is the harm with two spaces?"

      I live and work in Japan, and Japanese text doesn't uses spaces at all. Every now and then a colleague will ask me to check their English, and in their Word document there will be a random mix of zero(!), one, or two spaces after sentences. Therefore, I mostly see two spaces used not as a rule, but as a mistake - as in, most sentences will have one space after them, and sometimes a typing mistake or editing will leave in an extra space, or lose the spaces altogether. They just don't notice, so when I move the cursor and delete extra spaces they're always amazed I even saw that.

      I'd bet that there are a lot of non-techie people in the west with the same problem of inconsistency, and it's very noticeable in WYSIWYG editors. Really, HTML and LaTeX ignoring extraneous whitespace is a blessing.

  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @07:02PM (2 children)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @07:02PM (#678529)

    Lorem ipsum or fake.

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @08:56PM (1 child)

      by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 11 2018, @08:56PM (#678567)

      Fine. Compare:

      Bacon ipsum dolor amet kevin ham hock ground round jowl venison drumstick. Sirloin brisket turkey tri-tip meatball beef ribs, alcatra jerky ham hock pork belly. Tri-tip leberkas picanha sirloin bresaola alcatra. Salami leberkas beef ribs, buffalo shank capicola pancetta ham chicken ham hock pig doner landjaeger sirloin flank.

      vs.

      Pork cupim chuck meatball.  Hamburger burgdoggen cow shoulder pork belly tenderloin.  Hamburger sausage tri-tip, ball tip swine turducken bresaola burgdoggen tail salami.  Sirloin flank venison ham prosciutto pork belly.  Pork belly shank kielbasa ribeye.

  • (Score: 2) by bob_super on Friday May 11 2018, @10:41PM

    by bob_super (1357) on Friday May 11 2018, @10:41PM (#678597)

    Them commies were first in space, period.
    So we gotta make sure to not be like them commies, period, space, second space.

(1)