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* Don't use three periods (bad spacing) or the [[Unicode]] character '…' (HORIZONTAL ELLIPSIS, U+2026).
* Don't use three periods (bad spacing) or the [[Unicode]] character '…' (HORIZONTAL ELLIPSIS, U+2026).
* What about <tt>\dots</tt>? '''fixme'''
* What about <tt>\dots</tt>? '''fixme'''
===Tildes===
Generally, <tt>\textasciitilde{}</tt> is the way to go. In math mode, use <tt>\sim</tt>.
* When typesetting a url, the <tt>url</tt> and <tt>hyperref</tt> packages handle tildes properly.
===Backslashes===
Use <tt>\textbackslash{}</tt> to render a backslash in text.


==[[Unicode]]==
==[[Unicode]]==

Revision as of 23:14, 10 December 2009

Checkers

Punctuation

Quotation Marks

Use `` for the left mark, and for the right.

Hyphens/Dashes

  • Hyphens separate the parts of a compound word. Use a single '-', without spaces.
  • Endashes separate the bounds of a range, usually numerics. Use two '-' characters, without spaces.
  • Emdashes separate distinct thoughts. Use three '-' characters, without spaces.
  • Minus signs are a mathematical entity. Use a single '-' in math mode.

Periods

To get correct spacing:

  • Use ".\ " if the period does not end the sentence.
  • Use "\@. " if the period ends the sentence, and follows a capital letter.

Ellipses

Use \ldots (or \cdots for line-centered dots).

  • Don't use three periods (bad spacing) or the Unicode character '…' (HORIZONTAL ELLIPSIS, U+2026).
  • What about \dots? fixme

Tildes

Generally, \textasciitilde{} is the way to go. In math mode, use \sim.

  • When typesetting a url, the url and hyperref packages handle tildes properly.

Backslashes

Use \textbackslash{} to render a backslash in text.

Unicode

Basic LaTeX doesn't support UTF-8 beyond expanding macros based on lexical sequences. If this is intended, use the utf8 parameter to the inputenc package. XeTeX aims to be a fully Unicode-aware TeX engine.

See Also