> "old enough to remember when typesetting was > an art > practiced by people" Hey wait a minute, I resemble that remark! Briefly, I spent some time setting cold lead type with my stubbly little fingers. You used an "em" space after full stops, an "en" space otherwise. You padded after the "em" first, then spread "thins" around the line to get it to long enough that you could clamp it firmly in the frame. However, this doesn't resolve the monofont issue. An "em" is (usually) not twice as wide as an "en". An "en" is the width of the letter "n"; about in the middle of all of the widths. An "em", is the width of the letter "m", the widest of all letters. Anyway. I'm not a big fan of flags and options and settings. I think the text wrapper should have the "fix sentence ending" method renamed to "find sentence ending" and the wrap() and fill() functions could have a hook where a Strategy class can be applied. - One strategy class puts a single space after full stops. - Another puts double spaces after full stops. - A subclass of either of these could spread space around to justify the line. - I think that Unicode offers "em" and "en"-sized spaces; what this does with good old fashioned Courrier 12 I have no idea; but someone could add this strategy if it made them happy. ===== -- S. Lott, CCP :-{) S_LOTT@YAHOO.COM http://www.mindspring.com/~slott1 Buccaneer #468: KaDiMa Macintosh user: drinking upstream from the herd. __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Yahoo! - Official partner of 2002 FIFA World Cup http://fifaworldcup.yahoo.com
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