A lot of non-fiction books also have
space between paragraphs which works well, but I don't consider it should be done for novels.
At least there were
spaces between paragraphs which made the document easier to read.
Not exact matches
Also, as an FYI, as a power - consumer of ebooks, the WORST formatted ones, with arbitrary pages of
space between paragraphs, etc, are from the major houses,
which presumably (but not necessarily) have dedicated html people.
I wish Amazon had included their new Ember font,
which tends to eliminate weird
spacing issues
between words and
paragraphs, but right now Ember is only available on the Oasis and Voyage.
Use
paragraph indents (usually about a quarter of an inch), and don't add an extra
space in
between paragraphs,
which is more common and appropriate for online texts.
When I downloaded it from the store it would not center text, except for headers (
which it turned into all caps) and would not indent quotes and adds a
space between each
paragraph so poetry looks strange.
There's also the fact most Kobo ebooks have
spaces between paragraphs instead of indented
paragraphs,
which wastes even more
space.
In book view, there are options to alter the appearance of page turn animations and to turn on and off Kobo Styling,
which usually removes
spaces between paragraphs and changes text type and size.
This is a quote of Stephen Schneider's,
which is why there are quotation marks around it and a
space between paragraphs, but I suppose I could have been more clear that it was Schneider I was quoting.
One of the best tips is to maximize the use of white
space between paragraphs and in the left and right margins
which makes the site easier to... [more]
One of the best tips is to maximize the use of white
space between paragraphs and in the left and right margins
which makes the site easier to read.
Whether you're jumping from single
spacing to 1.5, or only adjusting the
spacing between paragraphs, these subtle changes can make a difference in the length of your resume, and can even create more white
space —
which is a good thing.