blueash |
11-01-2014 09:16 AM |
Quote:
Originally Posted by Carl in Tampa
(Post 960360)
The lady who wrote the article did a follow up in the comment section where she acknowledged that the rule had changed back to two spaces.
"Well, here’s a new wrinkle: One of my facebook readers pointed out the although APA guidelines at one time reduced the required spacing after a period from two down to one, they returned it to two in 2009 in the 6th Edition (see section 4, first bullet)."
Perhaps she should have just removed her posting.
By the way, no "rulemaker" is going to prevent me from doing two spaces after a period at the end of a sentence.
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Well, I don't really care about one or two spaces. But it is a bit misleading perhaps to cite the American Psychological Association as an authority on punctuation. There are some accepted arbiters of grammar and the APA is not one of the major ones although their style is used in several social science journals. Most journals and newspapers have come to the opposite conclusion including the AP, JAMA, Wikipedia, NYTimes. And the Chicago Manual of Style is rather clear on its one not two choice. So I really don't think that "she should have just removed her posting."
So the lady in the article did not acknowledge that the rule had changed back to two spaces. She in fact correctly stated that the rule is one space but then acknowledged that one organization had gone back to two.
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