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by monocasa 3114 days ago
Except the fact that the two spaces before a period far predate the typewriter.
1 comments

Wider sentence spacing certainly predates the typewriter, but the question then was not "how many spaces" but "how much space".

Someone writing by hand obviously does not count a discrete number of spaces, and a cold-metal typesetter has a wide variety of spaces available: they might use a one-and-a-half-en space (either a single piece of type or an en space followed by a half-en space) or an em space.

It must have been the introduction of the typewriter that brought the idea of "two spaces" instead of "wider space".

> It must have been the introduction of the typewriter that brought the idea of "two spaces" instead of "wider space".

Come to think about it, why not the movable type printing press as the starting point?

(please ignore this, I apparently didn't read your comment fully!)