Le 02/06/2016 à 18:50, Brynn a écrit :
> Well yeah, there might be an extra space at "....project. In this way...." 
> Maybe she gave up on it?  You know, I might not be the only one who has this 
> habit, because a lot of that text with double-spaces, I didn't write it.

Indeed I thought you couldn't be the only one.

> I guess you can just fix them when you find them, if they're bothersome. 
> Better would be if Django just didn't put them in, because at my age, 
> changing how I type isn't likely to happen.

I would consider it as a bug.
Then, if it can help other readers to skip this wondering, I'll correct
that, even if I must use Chromium for it. That's true it is more
difficult to distinguish sentences when ? and ! are followed by a single
space… But I rarely seen the double-space rule elsewhere.
Chromium has a recent strange graphic fact: hovering its buttons (in the
toolbars or the ‘find’ interface) draws a square box, then activating it
(clicking) morphes the square into a disc (which looks bigger, being
circumscribed to the previous square). That's a bit disturbing.
A problem is: when I erase one of this spaces, the remaining one is
often a no-break space…
Another typographic habit that bothers me is the use of narrow dashes
‘-’ or double-narrow dashes ‘-’. We're in the epoch of Unicode, we can
put em dashes ‘—’ (or en dashes ‘–’ e.g. for intervals).

> I don't know if "Maren" is boy's or girl's name, since I'm not familiar with 
> German, or even European culture.  But the person behind the name is a 
> woman.  And me too (although I've been told that in Europe, "brynn" can be 
> male or female name - like Chris, Tracy, Jessie, etc.).

To me, ‘Brynn’ looked like ‘Bryce’; but I noticed you were referred to
as a woman. I was used to fully masculine teams in computer projects so
having a woman as a team leader is a nice thing.
I think the star on this page means ‘leader’:
https://inkscape.org/en/*translator
--
Sylvain

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