I was taught to double space, didn’t realize it wasn’t proper. Honestly I think it looks nicer on a page, it delineates sentences more clearly. Apparently it was the standard before computers were a thing, kinda weird that it was the standard where I went to school though.
I was taught to as well but entering the computer age then taught not to again. Apparently double space was related to the physical limitations somehow for typewriters? I dunno for sure but it is somehow anachronistic.
Part of it is ease of reading. Double spaces simplify things.
As for why manually add spaces on type writers… but not on computers? It’s simple. Fonts can be adaptive. You’ve got monospaced fonts like courtier knew that would show no difference in spacing unless you add a second space, or fonts like Calibri where the font’s spacing is… less fixed.
A (mechanical) type writer can’t adjust the font at will. It strikes the same spot on a page, in what is basically a grid. Same goes for printing press.
For a long time I thought the double-space convention was strictly limited to school, since I had never seen a professionally printed book, magazine, or newspaper that used it. I just took a look at my bookshelf and pulled out the oldest book I own (from 1909), and it does indeed use double-spaces.
Before the First World War virtually all English-language books were printed following standard typesetters’ spacing rules. By the end of the Second World War most American books and an increasing proportion of English books were printed following the typewriter’s English spacing approximation rules.[17] Around this time, the practice of single spacing became more prevalent. There were various circumstances which could have contributed to the change. For example, there was an increase in high-volume low-cost mass-produced printing (e.g., newspapers, pulp novels, magazines). Also, a significant innovation in the typewriter was the breaking of the typewriter “grid” in 1941.
Fun fact: HTML rendering explicitly squashes multiple spaces into one, so if you try to double-space your sentences, it won’t display as such in a web browser. This sentence uses double-spaced words, and I’ll bet it doesn’t look that way to you.
I was taught to double space, didn’t realize it wasn’t proper. Honestly I think it looks nicer on a page, it delineates sentences more clearly. Apparently it was the standard before computers were a thing, kinda weird that it was the standard where I went to school though.
I was taught to as well but entering the computer age then taught not to again. Apparently double space was related to the physical limitations somehow for typewriters? I dunno for sure but it is somehow anachronistic.
Part of it is ease of reading. Double spaces simplify things.
As for why manually add spaces on type writers… but not on computers? It’s simple. Fonts can be adaptive. You’ve got monospaced fonts like courtier knew that would show no difference in spacing unless you add a second space, or fonts like Calibri where the font’s spacing is… less fixed.
A (mechanical) type writer can’t adjust the font at will. It strikes the same spot on a page, in what is basically a grid. Same goes for printing press.
For a long time I thought the double-space convention was strictly limited to school, since I had never seen a professionally printed book, magazine, or newspaper that used it. I just took a look at my bookshelf and pulled out the oldest book I own (from 1909), and it does indeed use double-spaces.
I just looked it up, and it seems like double-spacing fell out of use in the early-mid 20th century. From https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_sentence_spacing :
Fun fact: HTML rendering explicitly squashes multiple spaces into one, so if you try to double-space your sentences, it won’t display as such in a web browser. This sentence uses double-spaced words, and I’ll bet it doesn’t look that way to you.
I see the double spaces but it seems like a lot of formatting doesn’t work on jerboa.
Ah, that makes sense. I just checked my app and it shows the double-spaces too. The web client doesn’t, since it’s converted to HTML.
Early to mid 20th century??! Dang, double space was seemingly still very much in fashion even after Y2K. Welp, gotta go yell at some kids on my lawn.
I think this is because it was still promoted by teachers for schoolwork long after it was the norm in professional printing.
I’ve seen a handful of people in my career write emails in this style, even recently, so it’s not totally dead.
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