In the section "He doth fill fields..." we see an example of Fill Justification where two spaces fit between every word. This doesn't give us an idea of how spaces are distributed if the number of spaces needed does not divide evenly into the number of interstices.
In the section "More particulars must justify my knowledge...", indicates the approach is to "...distribute any padding as evenly as possible into the existing whitespace gaps...", but still doesn't tell us what the rule really is. In the example, there are two spaces to be distributed and three interstices. The last two each get one space. That could be the "add one pad to each insterstice from right to left, repeat until exhausted" rule, which isn't really about even distribution. One other note about this example: The text says C<form> will "...extract a maximal substring...", but in the example that string would be "A fellow of infinite j". The example output shows that the extracted string isn't quite maximal. It tries to keep words together (this rule is detailed elsewhere, but this example doesn't refer to that extraction rule). -- Gregor Purdy [EMAIL PROTECTED] Focus Research, Inc. http://www.focusresearch.com/