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[groff] 04/07: doc/groff.texi: Fix content nit.
From: |
G. Branden Robinson |
Subject: |
[groff] 04/07: doc/groff.texi: Fix content nit. |
Date: |
Sun, 12 Feb 2023 16:05:59 -0500 (EST) |
gbranden pushed a commit to branch master
in repository groff.
commit 5e2ace7b158362e679442509b8bfa800d1ae8390
Author: G. Branden Robinson <g.branden.robinson@gmail.com>
AuthorDate: Sun Feb 12 12:49:03 2023 -0600
doc/groff.texi: Fix content nit.
What font doesn't come with multiple parentheses (usually pairs)?
Also, symbol fonts often contain bracket pieces which are sure to have
large both heights _and_ depths.
---
doc/groff.texi | 19 ++++++++++---------
1 file changed, 10 insertions(+), 9 deletions(-)
diff --git a/doc/groff.texi b/doc/groff.texi
index cda85f6f8..589bd2bd3 100644
--- a/doc/groff.texi
+++ b/doc/groff.texi
@@ -11632,15 +11632,16 @@ This is a test.
@cindex spacing, vertical
These concepts were introduced in @ref{Page Geometry}. The height of a
font's tallest glyph is one em, which is equal to the type size in
-points.@footnote{This tallest glyph is typically the parenthesis.
-Unfortunately, in many cases the actual dimensions of the glyphs in a
-font do not closely match its declared type size! For example, in
-the standard PostScript font families, 10-point Times sets better with
-9-point Helvetica and 11-point Courier than if all three were used
-at 10@tie{}points.} A vertical spacing of less than 120% of the type
-size can make a document hard to read. Larger proportions can be useful
-to spread the text for annotations or proofreader's marks. By default,
-GNU @code{troff} uses 10@tie{}point type on 12@tie{}point spacing.
+points.@footnote{In text fonts, the tallest glyphs are typically
+parentheses. Unfortunately, in many cases the actual dimensions of the
+glyphs in a font do not closely match its declared type size! For
+example, in the standard PostScript font families, 10-point Times sets
+better with 9-point Helvetica and 11-point Courier than if all three
+were used at 10@tie{}points.} A vertical spacing of less than 120% of
+the type size can make a document hard to read. Larger proportions can
+be useful to spread the text for annotations or proofreader's marks. By
+default, GNU @code{troff} uses 10@tie{}point type on 12@tie{}point
+spacing.
@cindex leading
Typographers call the difference between type size and vertical spacing
@dfn{leading}.@footnote{Pronounce ``leading'' to rhyme with
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