NOTES ON MANUSCRIPT FORMAT

Why You Won’t Go to Hell for Putting Two Spaces at the End of a Sentence

The double tap may be an obsolescent practice, but it’s also a sensible one. There’s no reason to shame anyone for it.

William Shunn
5 min readNov 28, 2018

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Image licensed from Bigstock

Back in early 2011, Slate’s Farhad Manjoo set the blogosphere a-boil with a vitriolic philippic against the evils of ever placing two spaces at the end of a sentence. A veritable Greek chorus rushed to add its voices to his, including no less a figure than John Scalzi. On the flip side, Megan McArdle of The Atlantic spearheaded the opposition, and a flurry of spirited defenses of the two-space tradition set out to demolish the arguments at the center of Manjoo’s emotional diatribe.

I stayed out of the fray at the time. I’ve already had what I hoped would be my definitive say about sentence spacing, and in fact I spent a lot of time last year thinking through some significant ameliorations of my former strict insistence on two spaces. It was never my intention, back in 1995 when I first posted “Proper Manuscript Format” on the web, to become a de facto formatting guru, but it happened anyway. This means I still get frequent emails from aspiring writers who want to know why this authority or that is telling them they should never ever

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William Shunn

Writer, poet and puzzle maker. Hugo and Nebula Award finalist. Author of The Accidental Terrorist: Confessions of a Reluctant Missionary. He/him/Bill.