On 12 Sep 2010, at 15:01, Ralf Wildenhues wrote: > * Peter Rosin wrote on Sat, Sep 11, 2010 at 02:24:18PM CEST: >> * libltdl/config/ltmain.m4sh (func_mode_link): Avoid calculating >> the command line length and take the @file branch *if* the file >> names needs to be converted for the toolchain and the @file >> branch works. Fixes stresstest.at when doing a cross from Cygwin > > Two spaces after period.
Only for texinfo markup I believe, since two spaces after a period are widely
regarded as typographically bad (see the following and the reports it cites at
the end):
http://webword.com/reports/period.html
And even then, there is still support for normal spacing in texinfo:
http://www.gnu.org/software/hello/manual/texinfo/frenchspacing.html
[[ASIDE: Curious that the default `...@frenchspacing off' is used to indicate
the use of 2 spaces at the end of a sentence, and declaring `...@frenchspacing
on' conversely indicates the use of a single space at the end of a sentence -
the exact opposite of how the term is normally used:
"French spacing—a term synonymous with single space sentence spacing until
the late 20th century.[7] Double spacing,[8] or placing two spaces between
sentences (sometimes referred to as English spacing), came into widespread use
with the introduction of the typewriter in the late 19th century" --
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sentence_spacing]]
I see that the GCS wants two spaces after a period in code comments, but when I
tested in emacs, my single spaced sentences worked just fine. It turns out that
I added the following to my startup so long ago that I'd forgotten I had done
it:
(setq sentence-end-double-space nil)
Is there some other mandate that explains why we should go against modern
typographical conventions and insist on double spaces?
Cheers,
--
Gary V. Vaughan ([email protected])
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