piątek, 17 grudnia 2010

Rules of DTP: Lesson 1: Space After Punctuation

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Lesson 1: Space After Punctuation
Jacci Howard Bear
From Jacci Howard Bear, your Guide to Desktop Publishing

Welcome! You have subscribed to the 12 Rules of Desktop Publishing email class. After Rule #12 the daily emails will stop.

One Space or Two?
To kick off the class, what follows is a controversial topic. What? You didn't think a subject like desktop publishing could have controversy? Try asking whether you have to have a Mac to do desktop publishing, or which software is best. Sometimes the discussions get very heated.

Today's rule of desktop publishing is not about the hardware or the software. It doesn't require buying a new computer or learning a new software program; however, for some of you it may require unlearning something you've done for years and years, perhaps without even thinking about it.

Use One Space Between Sentences, Not Two
Typewriter-trained or not, you may have always been told that it was proper to put two spaces after a period or other punctuation. Find out where that practice originated and why you may need to change your ways. Already doing it the right way? Get a little ammunition to help convince others. But don't forget the bottomline - this rule applies to desktop publishing, not necessarily everything or everyone else.


Pages in this Lesson
1: One Space vs. Two

2: Comparisons and Bottomline

3: Assignment

Tips, Trivia, Tidbits
Typewriters, QWERTY, & Typing
Carlos Glidden and Samuel Soulé, invented the first practical typewriting machine in 1866. The QWERTY keyboard layout came about as a result of keys that kept jamming. By separating frequently used letter combinations the typist was slowed down and keys didn't get all jammed up. Learn more about the history of typewriters from About Inventors.


This email is written by:
Jacci Howard Bear
Desktop Publishing Guide
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