> for starters, it's an abuse of the leader object.
It's what the leader object is for.
> The thin space is used to separate digit groups in numbers with
> five or more digits. It is a hard space, narrower than the word
> space, and will not be adjusted in width when trying to achieve
> justification. Thin spaces are part of the System International
> specification: using commas between digits is passé.
This one is not in many fonts, and its width is font-dependent.
>
> En and em spaces find modern use in providing a bit less/extra
> space when emphasizing the separation of an element from its group,
> while still maintaining the visual cohesion of the whole group.
>
> Hair spaces are to be used on either side of an em dash.
This one is not in many fonts, and its width is font-dependent.
> I believe Mats is absolutely correct in requesting that XEP
> recognize and honour the various types of spaces.
>
I believe that Mats does not request that, but instead that the XSL
recommendation specify how to handle them; because XEP is conforming
now. And, in turn, I believe that not providing special handling for
typographical spaces is a good thing.
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Received on Wed Oct 19 09:34:18 2005
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.8 : Wed Oct 19 2005 - 09:34:19 PDT