It's what younger folks who are not part of the USA "baby boom" call older folks like me who do strange things like using a flip phone with no touch screen (ok, I finally switched a few years ago, but very late).

On 2/28/2020 9:05 AM, Mitch Mccluhan wrote:
  Boomer?
-----Original Message-----
From: Tom Brennan <t...@tombrennansoftware.com>
To: IBM-MAIN <IBM-MAIN@LISTSERV.UA.EDU>
Sent: Fri, Feb 28, 2020 9:49 am
Subject: Re: 2 Spaces after periods [was: RE: Rexx parse using period as 
placeholder]

Boomer :)

On 2/28/2020 7:40 AM, Mitch Mccluhan wrote:
   I VOTE FOR 2 SPACES!!!  Is that loud enough?  It has ALWAYS made reading, 
easier.
Mitch
-----Original Message-----
From: Joel C. Ewing <jcew...@acm.org>
To: IBM-MAIN <IBM-MAIN@LISTSERV.UA.EDU>
Sent: Fri, Feb 28, 2020 9:26 am
Subject: Re: 2 Spaces after periods [was: RE: Rexx parse using period as 
placeholder]

This is a sentence ending with one space. This is a sentence ending with
two spaces.  My email client is supposedly using a proportional,
variable width font, and the typical smaller width used for a space
character tends to make sentences merge together visually when only a
single space is used.  Two spaces make the end of a sentence more
apparent visually, especially since with many fonts a "period" is almost
indistinguishable from a speck of dirt on the screen.  The improved
visual separation with two spaces is even greater on typical browser fonts.

I personally think the argument for a single space at end of sentence is
BS, made up out of laziness by someone who has not yet needed reading
glasses.  Setting off sentences with extra space was a long-established
practice with good handwriting, not something  that originated because
typewriters had imprecise spacing.

Yes, a single space at end of sentence may now be acceptable, but it is
aesthetically inferior.
       JC Ewing

On 2/28/20 5:38 AM, Joe Monk wrote:
The rule now is 1 space after a period.

Two spaces after a period was the rule on a typewriter, because the fonts
weren't proportional, they were monospace. This led to uneven spacing of
words on paper, so two spaces was the rule.

Nowadays, on a computer, the fonts are proportional. For instance on a
typewriter, the characters i and a take the same amount of space. But on a
word processor, i and a dont take the same amount of space. Thus, no need
for two spaces.

This is a monospace font.
This is a proportional font.

Joe

On Thu, Feb 27, 2020 at 2:59 PM Paul Gilmartin <
0000000433f07816-dmarc-requ...@listserv.ua.edu> wrote:

On Thu, 27 Feb 2020 15:48:44 -0500, Steve Smith wrote:

Thanks for another reminder I'm "really old" :-).  The rule, btw, is two
spaces at the end of a sentence.  And I think it makes at least as much
sense for proportional fonts as mono.  You can (and I do) have Word check
to make sure they're always there...

Specifically, not after titles:  "Ms.  Smith", "Dr.  Jones:.  Also bad
places for
automatic linebreaks.

-- gil

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