Yes, something like U+2009 THIN SPACE can be used.
I did a test file to check.
Two thin spaces look very much like a normal space without justification.

In Scribus, though, depending on the font, those special spaces might not be available through Insert > Spaces & Breaks (for example, they are all available with Liberation Serif, but only non-breakable space is available with Times New Roman or Arial).

In that case, you can temporarily change the font to one which allows you to insert your thin spaces, then revert to your font. It will still work. Alternatively, you can insert them using the Unicode code, or copy-paste from a table of characters. The details to do this depend on your operating system...

15.02.21 à 00:26, Gregory Pittman a écrit :
On 2/14/21 5:52 PM, Matt Miller wrote:
My text alignment is "Align Text Justified" but there are some places where I'd like two 
particular adjacent words to stay exactly one space-width apart, while the rest of the text in that 
paragraph is justified.  So far the only workaround I've found is to select the two words and set 
"Manual Tracking" to whatever negative percent value looks good.  I have many places 
where I'd like this effect, and manual tweaking is a lot of work.  The negative percent I need is 
different in each case depending on how justification has changed the word spacing of that 
particular line, so I'm not seeing how to script this.

I think it would be ideal if there were some character that printed as a space 
but was not considered a word delimiter by the justification algorithm.  I'm 
open to using any Unicode character out there.  In all cases where I need this 
effect the two words in question would be the first two words of the Scribus 
paragraph.

My document is the Bible in traditional two-column pages, where each verse 
(except the first verse of a chapter) has the verse number as its first word.  
If that verse is also considered by the Bible to be the start of a new 
paragraph (which is not a Scribus paragraph since Scribus sees each verse as a 
distinct paragraph) then the second word of that verse is the pilcrow 
character, and in that case I want the pilcrow to not float out into the rest 
of the justified line.  Instead I want the pilcrow to always be one space width 
away from the verse number.
Hi Matt,

Here's something you might try. Replace the regular space with 2 thin spaces* 
(or maybe 3, depending on the width you're looking for). When I tried this, 
these thin spaces were not affected by justification. (I assume you mean full 
justification)

Greg

* Find this with Insert > Spaces & Breaks > Thin Space. Alternatives might be 
En Space or Mid Space -- neither of these seem affected by justification.
Once you find something that works you might set up a keyboard shortcut for it.


___
Scribus Mailing List: [email protected]
Edit your options or unsubscribe:
http://lists.scribus.net/mailman/listinfo/scribus
See also:
http://wiki.scribus.net
http://forums.scribus.net


--
Silvain Dupertuis
Route de Lausanne 335
1293 Bellevue (Switzerland)
tél. +41-(0)22-774.20.67
portable +41-(0)79-604.87.52
web: silvain-dupertuis.org <http://perso.silvain-dupertuis.org>
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: 
<http://lists.scribus.net/pipermail/scribus/attachments/20210215/0629dc19/attachment.htm>
___
Scribus Mailing List: [email protected]
Edit your options or unsubscribe:
http://lists.scribus.net/mailman/listinfo/scribus
See also:
http://wiki.scribus.net
http://forums.scribus.net

Reply via email to