Jump to content
Check out our exclusive articles, videos and font downloads on Patreon!

Ellipsis style?

Recommended Posts

Don McCahill

> Isn’t the traditional method for foundries to make the ellipsis em-width?
Does that still have any merit?

No more than any other rule in typography that conflicts with the Golden Rule of Typography: It should look right!

Link to comment
jupiterboy

I've found, in some cases, that the ellipsis character doesn't sit on the same baseline as the period.

Anyway, given that a best case scenario would be to avoid the character and make each instance using the period and spaces, I find three basic possible configurations for the ellipsis glyph.

What is most confusing is that in the current Chicago, it appears that the examples vary from what I'm showing above. Examples like number one above show a sentence space after the ellipsis. In examples like number two above there is a word space after the period. (11.63 & 11.64 for those following at home)

I'm not a type designer, but it would seem there are uses for three separate characters, given that two would be identical save the side bearings.

Link to comment
Typical

No one has mentioned Bringhurst's Elements, which criticizes Chicago's method as being too open. Likewise, I agree with those who find the included ellipsis in fonts to be too tight; is it ok to have a character wider than the em in fonts? I currently use a macro that inserts a space, then a combination of 3 periods and 2 non-breaking spaces, all with character style having tighter tracking, and finally a normal space. This works for the fonts I use. The first line below uses this method; 2nd line is spaces and periods, 3rd is the font's built-in ellipsis with regular spaces.

Link to comment
jupiterboy

I think many people work with editors who are more tuned to Chicago than Bringhurst.

What would be lovely would be to pick out the collective intent of the mark, the difficult usage situations, and a proposal for a more automated and universal solution.

In the example I posted above I'm using the ellipsis mark from the font. What I don't get is what Chicago wants in terms of a space after a period or other sentence ending punctuation when combined with an ellipsis.

Link to comment
Thomas Phinney

Most Adobe fonts were designed with the ellipsis on an em width, per Chicago. When I questioned the practice a while back, David Lemon told me that it allowed for the ellipsis to be used as a standardized dot leader in typesetting software. I'm not completely convinced this is still relevant today, but it might explain the history.

We've recently been talking about some possibilities for contextual processing to use it both for the dot leader function and as an actual ellipsis.

> I often have to track it up to get all three periods on the same line.

Why not just format it with "no break"? Or is this a feature not present in your DTP software?

Regards,

T

Link to comment
Dunwich Type

Editors don’t know Bringhurst from Adam. They all use Chicago.

Those of us who cry ourselves to sleep after the daily dose of AP style wish it were so.

Link to comment
charles_e

Thomas: Why not just format it with “no break”? Or is this a feature not present in your DTP software?

If you mean the *nobreak* space character, it is usually 500 units -- an en-space. Too big.

Back when we were using TeX, we had a new customer who used Quark, and wanted an ellipsis with fixed space between the periods, rather than the justifying word space (my preference). But they had trouble specifying that fixed space. With TeX, we could define \ellip{} to be anything (e.g., .\hskip.02em{}.\hskip.02em{}.). We set ellipses with about 30 different values for the horizontal skip, so they could pick a value. Faced with that level of choice, they just gave up & said "set what you think looks good."

Varying house style s not something the type designer should address. From my point of view, the ellipsis character is there only for those who don't really have an opinion.

As to Chicago Style, I've sat in too many meeting where the Chicago editors had to field complaints about "Chicago style." Their answer, which seems perfectly appropriate to me, is that Chicago Style is the house style of the University of Chicago Press. Anyone who doesn't want to follow a particular part of it is free to do what they want. And while rare in practice, the University of Chicago Press does, on occasion, vary from their house style when it makes sense to do so. Formatting tables is one obvious place where the overall design of a book may require varying from the standard template & style. That some other editors take Chicago Style as revealed truth rather than a way to proceed when all other things are equal is not Chicago's problem.

The best answer is to think about what an ellipsis signals, and how this is best done within the rhythm of the text. It would be a copout to only look at what Bringhurst says, or Chicago says. Whatever you come up with will be a compromise, so pay attention to what you are willing to live with.

Link to comment
James Arboghast

I haven't read every scrap of text on this thread but will offer my take on ellipsis for what it's worth.

(1) To a type designer, ellipsis is a single, self-contained character, consisting of three dots and no more than three dots. For example, there is no such thing as an ellipsis made up of four dots. What are the bars like on a Euro? They're slashed from top right to bottom left. That's the standard for a Euro. What's the definition of an ellipsis? Three dots. That's all there is to it. Anything more and it's not an ellipsis.

(2) The idea of breaking up the dots of an ellipsis over two lines is preposterous and inconcievable.

(3) When I use ellipsis in typeset material (rarely) it goes at the end of a line or as close to the end of a line as possible. Usually I use an emdash instead of an ellipsis because ellipsis has become a typographic cliché thanks to the internet and message boards.

(4) If my editor or other seniors question the way I use ellipsis, or the fact I've replaced it with an emdash I tell them emphatically "It's just common sense. If you don't agree, sack me." Nobody has ever sacked me for it. I always get my way becaws it's very easy to demonstrate why breaking the thing up or putting it on the next line when it clearly belongs at the end of the previous line is the most utterly senseless thing you can do with an ellipsis.

(5) This thread and most of its participants are firmly in the grip of Bringhurst and the Chicago Manual of Style. The rest of the world is not slave to such unimaginative and stifling typesetting manuals.

(4) You don't put a period or a comma or any other form of dot-like punctuation after an ellipsis. What are you guys, nuts? An ellipsis is equivelant to a period. At the end of a sentence it indicates that the sentence continues. It's common sense that if the sentence continues, there is no need for a period, no earthly reason for putting one there. Replace the ellipsis with an emdash---now put a period after the emdash. No-no-no! Common sense. It doesn't belong there because the dash indicates the sentence continues. So why would you do that to an ellipsis? Doesn't make sense.

(5) Breaking the ellipsis up over two lines by typing it manually with periods and spaces is like taking an emdash and breaking that across two lines, or breaking an ampersand over two lines. Inconcievable! That makes no sense to me at all. I know, I know, I've covered this point twice. I did that on purpose because I'm having trouble believing that anyone calling themself a typographer, let alone a professional typographer or typesetter, would break an ellipsis over two lines for spacing reasons. Makes no sense to me at all and is the kind of boring pedantic act I would never contemplate.

j a m e s

Link to comment
James Arboghast

Breaking an ellipsis over to the next line? No that's nuts. Completely bonkers. I can't think of anything more counterintuitive. No way dude.

j a m e s

Link to comment
pattyfab

Well James thanks for YOUR take on things but I work in book publishing where editors don't take too kindly to "my way or the highway". Chicago and Bringhurst are designed to set up common styles and conventions in typesetting that make it clear TO THE READER what is going on. If you want to reinvent punctuation, be my guest, but don't expect your readers to thank you. If you're designing a poster for a rock festival or a contemporary art exhibition, then sure, play around with punctuation, but if you're typesetting a novel for folks to read, creating your own punctuation styles will only confuse, distract, and annoy your readers (yeah, I used the serial comma there. That's in Chicago too; I don't like it but my editors insist on it).

An ellipsis has a VERY different function editorially than an em-dash. The function of an ellipsis is to indicate omission in cited text. Yes, it is used as well to indicate a pause or hesitation in thought or trailing off, but those are not its primary function. In those latter cases it could perhaps be replaced with another character. But in its primary function it must be used as is. It should NEVER be broken over two lines as you've said. And you are right that the punctuation (period, comma) should precede not follow it.

Link to comment
jupiterboy

Consider the challenges of publishing a book of interviews. You have missing info, trailing off, and interuptions to conversation. These are subtle differences but they can be handled consistently and will give the reader insight into the nuances of the conversation that would otherwise be lost.

We need editors working with authors to handle this aspect of decision making.

Every style guide has rules for using ending puncuation with the ellipsis. It is the spacing associated with these situations that end up holding the information. See my post above.

Link to comment
pattyfab

Sorry if I ranted above, I just think that design that doesn't respect content is bad design. As an art director I encountered designers that refused to respect editorial concerns and that arrogance really got under my skin. It does a disservice to our profession.

Link to comment
jupiterboy

I've assembled style guides before. The process of bringing 60 or so NY editors together in agreement on micro issues that are not covered by any style guide convinced me that most people, even professionals, do not know about the number of grey areas in grammar and punctuation.

I think this is an area that warrants a good airing out, as dreadful as it gets.

Link to comment
eliason

And you are right that the punctuation (period, comma) should precede not follow it.

I would think that that would depend on the structure of the text that is being omitted. For example:

ORIGINAL:
They talked about ellipsis style in the thread. As you can see, Craig added his opinion.

PERIOD THEN ELLIPSIS:
They talked about ellipsis style in the thread. … Craig added his opinion.

ELLIPSIS THEN PERIOD:
They talked about ellipsis style … . As you can see, Craig added his opinion.

(Note: spacing just to clarify the characters used - I'm already on record as wishing the spaces in any period-ellipsis combo would be equal.)

The four dots are logical and informative and should certainly be retained where appropriate. And a dash is something else entirely, I believe.

Link to comment
typodermic

When I add ellipsi to fonts, I test them to see if they look nice and appropriate for the font. Fontlab will autogenerate an ellipsis but often it can look too tight. So, usually, I'll space the periods slightly further apart and pad the sidebearings a bit until it looks balanced.

Is everyone cool with that strategy?

If you're scanning my old fonts for ellipsi, you'll see tight ones and Bringhurstian honkers so don't bother. I'm just talking about my current ellipsis strategy for text fonts.

Link to comment
murphy.md

Why should the spacing between the dots in the ellipsis be equal to the space between the ellipsis and the period? It essentially means the reader has no way of telling if it should be read ... . or . ... (assuming they even notice there are four dots instead of three).

Personally, I don't see the need to use the period with the ellipsis anyway.

Three dots ... anything more and it’s not an ellipsis.

But this depends on how much editorial freedom you have.

Link to comment
eliason

Why should the spacing between the dots in the ellipsis be equal to the space between the ellipsis and the period? It essentially means the reader has no way of telling if it should be read ... . or . ... (assuming they even notice there are four dots instead of three).

You're right that it makes the parsing more difficult, so that's a pretty good point. But the space between the last word and the first dot should give it away: no space means the first dot's a period, space means it's the beginning of an ellipsis. As in jupiterboy's "Granpa" examples above, which also show different spacing after.

Link to comment
Typical

I'm looking at a page on unicode space characters and still pondering:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space_(punctuation)#Table_of_spaces

Especially the "thin space," "hair space," and "narrow no-break space." However, in Word, none of these break.

In TNR, "thin-space" is the same width as "narrow no-break space," and using combinations of these and periods may be a viable solution.

Part of the problem is that there are so many ways to create the ellipses.

InDesign has a character format setting that can specify "do not break."

Looking at eliason's post above, for PERIOD THEN ELLIPSIS it would seem allowable to allow a linebreak after the period/before the ellipsis, but for ELLIPSIS THEN PERIOD, to my eye, any line break at all doesn't work, including before the ellipsis.

Also there is a discrepancy (in response to Charles_E): in newer fonts, the non-breaking space is exactly the same width as the regular space, but in many "older" (in Internet years) fonts it is an en-space. The unicode definition calls for the nb space to be the same width as regular space.

The advantage of using some type of space rather than a precomposed glyph is that your paragraph composer (human or programmed) could squeeze or stretch the ellipsis along with the rest of the line.

But of course if there is no ellipsis in the font many will complain ...

Link to comment
murphy.md

You’re right that it makes the parsing more difficult, so that’s a pretty good point. But the space between the last word and the first dot should give it away: no space means the first dot’s a period, space means it’s the beginning of an ellipsis. As in jupiterboy’s “Granpa” examples above, which also show different spacing after.

Yes, but that assumes that as the reader you know what editorial convention the editor has used. I still think it is clearer to make the spacing between the ellipsis and any periods slightly bigger (or smaller) than the spacing between dots in the ellipsis (if you insist on using them at all). I prefer to simply use the ellipsis character, even if I am connecting parts of a quote that ran over two sentences. I think the alternative can be at best ugly, and at worst confusing for the reader.

Link to comment
charles_e

I'm sure many of you don't like all the characters in the Latin alphabet. They make kerning hard, and some of them are downright ugly. Plus, the Latin alphabet is archaic. Why don't we just make a new one, with characters better suited to our tastes?

Link to comment
jupiterboy

Now that we have teams we can clarify a few points.

1.) Chicago does have a simple three dot only ellipsis method, which is appropriate for many projects.

2.) Quoted interviews and legal language often require a level of parsing that a simple style can't cover. I suspect some people may not have ever set text like this.

3.) Chicago may have not set their own book with the best examples of spacing, which clouds and confuses the ideas.

4.) Fonts built with an ellipsis character that works in harmony (equal interior spaces) with ending punctuation offer those without the software and those in search of an automated approach a good option. (See "Granpa" lol example above.)

5.) Variance in spacing could potentially add clarity, but this is specifically not the rule and editors won't tolerate looking like dunces to indulge a designer's personal sense of aesthetics.

Link to comment
guifa

If well designed, I prefer the precomposed ellipsis personally.

For editorial style, it's still not uncommon to see the ellipsis placed in brackets for quotes, especially when the source text might include ellipses (and often times italicised):

Original text: So… I went down to the big blue store.
Quoted: “So… I went down to the […] store”.

This often comes up in quoting poetry.

If the distinction between period-ellipsis, and ellipsis-period is critical to the discussion of a text, I think most article authors would prefer to split the quotation even if it's as simple as “and later states”:

Original text: Alabama is in the Deep South. Long ago, the North invaded the South because the South broke away desiring stronger state’s rights.
Article text: Matthew notes that “Alabama is in the Deep South”, and adds that the Northern Invasion, where “the North invaded the South” happened in 1861.

Note that even in this case the punctuation is ambiguous, because I would still quote it as “Alabama is in the Deep South” + comma even if the original sentence were “Alabama is in the Deep South of the United States of America.”

So, I don't think it’s a huge issue being able to distinguish the order in a period-ellipsis or ellipsis-period combination. I do feel it’s important that they can be connected with no visual break between the four dots.

«El futuro es una línea tan fina que apenas nos damos cuenta de pintarla nosotros mismos». (La Luz Oscura, por Javier Guerrero)

Link to comment
jupiterboy

So, I don’t think it’s a huge issue being able to distinguish the order in a period-ellipsis or ellipsis-period combination. I do feel it’s important that they can be connected with no visual break between the four dots.

It is in an extended interview format that it gets tricky. Add to this a heavy name, and you must attempt to get these details right because the work will be quoted.

Here are two examples that come to mind.

http://www.stoutbooks.com/cgi-bin/stoutbooks.cgi/76420.html

http://news.artlimited.net/news_display.php?id=432813&lg=en

Both have extended exerpted sections that employ the full range of possible combinations.

Link to comment

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now

Our partners

The largest selection of professional fonts for any project. Over 130,000 available fonts, and counting.
Discover the Best Deals for Freelance Designers.
Discover the fonts from the Germany foundry FDI Type. A brand of Schriftkontor Ralf Herrmann.
Get to your apps and creative work. Explore curated inspiration, livestream learning, tutorials, and creative challenges.
Download FDI Altmeister for free …
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We are placing functional cookies on your device to help make this website better.