|
From: | Axel Kielhorn |
Subject: | Re: [Groff] gkurz, a short introduction for german users |
Date: | Wed, 29 Aug 2007 21:20:51 +0200 |
Am 29.08.2007 um 01:21 schrieb Werner LEMBERG:
Start a new sentence at a new line (is this a "law" or just a good idea?)It's a good idea.
I thought so. It is diff- and therefore cvs-friendly.
Additionally, there's a difference between foo. bar and foo. bar The latter is the usual style with, say, emacs, so that it can easily find the end of a sentence (using a regular expression for searching) without stopping at abbreviations. With groff, you should do this too (this is, using two spaces after a full stop indicating a sentence ending) -- the second space is handled specially; cf. the documentation of the `.ss' request.
Thus foo. bar is equivalent to foo. barThe reason I don't see a difference after changing from "foo. bar" to "foo.\nbar" is the
.ss 12 0 request in de.tmac. (Which is in fr.tmac as well.) I think I should point this out. Axel
[Prev in Thread] | Current Thread | [Next in Thread] |