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by taejo
3115 days ago
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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". |
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Come to think about it, why not the movable type printing press as the starting point?