The thread on serif.com discusses formatting of poetry in a Kindle book. The 
problem is that the author would like to indent two lines.

You don't want to do that by using a character that "looks like a space" yet 
isn't seen by the software to be a space. This would break features like 
dictionary lookup on the first word on each of those lines. The actual solution 
is to style the text as indented. There are some guidelines on the KDP site.

   http://www.amazon.com/gp/feature.html?docId=1000729511 
   https://kdp.amazon.com/help?topicId=A17W8UM0MMSQX6#para

One way to achieve the desired goal is to use the 'margin' and 'text-align' CSS 
styles.

Addison

Addison Phillips
Globalization Architect (Amazon Lab126)
Chair (W3C I18N WG)

Internationalization is not a feature.
It is an architecture.


> -----Original Message-----
> From: Unicode [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of
> William_J_G Overington
> Sent: Thursday, March 27, 2014 1:14 AM
> To: [email protected]
> Cc: [email protected]
> Subject: Does regular Unicode have a character that looks like a space to a
> human yet is not treated as a space by software please?
> 
> Does regular Unicode have a character that looks like a space to a human yet 
> is
> not treated as a space by software please?
> 
> Please consider my use of U+E001 in the following thread.
> 
> https://community.serif.com/forum/pageplus/9646/formatting-poetry-for-e-books
> 
> Essentially, can that effect be achieved without using a Private Use Area
> character?
> 
> William Overington
> 
> 27 March 2014
> 
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> Unicode mailing list
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