Full-stop-capital-letter
I remember sitting in class when I was six years old, repeating after the teacher - full stop, capital letter. It’s a basic rule for written English.
Here’s a not so universal rule, that I learned in high school - Comma, one space. Full stop, two spaces. It doesn’t bear much relevance to handwriting, but it does on computers. Do it!
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Wrong, my friend. Comma, one space. Full stop, one space. It’s a basic typographical rule that originates from the first ever linotype machine which came with a style guide that said you should use a space bar and a thin space after a full stop. The two-spaces rule then got interpreted by typists on typewriters, but modern word processing packages use proportional fonts. The space left after a full stop, by pressing the space bar once, is larger than that used left between words. With proportional fonts (i.e. everythign other than Courier) it ends up leaving big blobs of white space all over the the text. You’ll find that modern typographers and book designers all use just one space.