Justification (typesetting)
In
typesetting,
justification is the setting of
text or
 |
images |
within a column or "measure" to align along both the left and right margin. Text set this way is said to be "justified".
The following paragraph is justified:In justified text the spaces between words, and, to a lesser extent, between
glyphs or
letters, are stretched or sometimes compressed in order to make the text align with both the left and right margins. When using justification it is customary to treat the last line of a
paragraph separately by left or right aligning it, depending on the language direction. Lines in which the spaces have been stretched beyond their normal width are called
loose lines, while those whose spaces have been compressed are called
tight lines.
The terms
Justification and
alignment are not synonymous. The error stems from the menu structure of the
word processor Microsoft Word, which places "Left", "Right", "Full" and "Centered" as choices beneath the menu item "Justification."
Typographers, typesetters and
graphic designers maintain that this is incorrect. "Justification" refers only to a setting of type aligned on both the left and right margins. The compounds "left/right/center/full-justified" are all incorrect. Correctly speaking there are four recognized typographic alignments:
* Centered
* Flush left (more accurately "flush left, ragged right")
* Flush right (more accurately "flush right, ragged left")
* Justified
Justification sometimes leads to typographic anomalies. When the spaces between words line up approximately above one another in several loose lines, a distracting
river of white space may appear. Rivers appear in right-aligned, left-aligned and centered settings too, but are more likely to flow in justified text due to the inconsistent word spacing. Another problem occurs when using justification in narrow columns, when exceptionally large spaces appear between only two or three words (called a
loose line). Both of these ‘problems' are solved by the addition of
hyphenation, as carried out by typesetting programs such as
LaTeX.
With the advent of digital typography, more advanced techniques have become possible, such as automatically choosing among different
glyphs for the same character or slightly stretching or shrinking the character in order to better fill the line. This technique of
glyph scaling or
microtypography has been implemented by
InDesign and more recent versions of
pdfTeX. Although one should be careful with changing the width more than a few percent, the number of characters on the line still allows some notable results to be achieved.
Justification has been the preferred setting of type in many western languages through the history of moveable type. Its use has only waned somewhat since the middle of the 20th century through the advocacy of the typographer
Jan Tschichold's book
Asymmetric Typography and the freer typographic treatment of the
Bauhaus,
Dada, and
Russian constructivist movements.
Not all "flush left" settings in traditional typography were created equal. In flush left text, words are separated on a line by the minimum word spacing built into the font. Continuous casting
typesetting systems such as the
Linotype were able to reduce the jaggedness of the right-hand side by inserting self-adjusting spacebands between words to evenly distribute white space, taking excess space that would have occurred at the end of the line and redistributing it between words.
This feature was available in traditional dedicated typesetting systems but is absent from most if not all
desktop publishing systems. Graphic designers and typesetters using desktop systems adjust word and letter spacing, or "tracking", on a manual line-by-line basis to achieve the same effect.
When a monospaced font is used, there is a way to justify text without insertingextra spaces. Careful word choice allows the author to write with exactly eightycharacters per line, creating a visual effect of justification. Since many wordsin English mean the same thing but are different lengths, it is just a matter oftrial and error to find the proper line length. For extra points, you should endthe last line after eighty characters as well, creating an invincible paragraph.