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The word-spacing property adds extra space between words. You can also use negative values to reduce spacing. The words move closer or further apart depending on whether you specify a negative or positive amount of extra space. For example: p {word-spacing: 0.4em;} You can letter spacing in millimetres, centimetres, inches, points, picas, pixels, the height of the font (em) or the height of the letter x (ex). The property does not set the spacing absolutely; it simply changes the amount of space the browser would have used. You might change the word spacing if you want to stretch or shrink one or more lines of text to fit in a particular space. You’ll also probably find that the spacing is different if text is right-justified. Or chaos could ensue. And I don’t think Internet Explorer or Netscape support word spacing. |
More information word-spacing |