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Slide

In addition, it is also important to allow the user to express preferences relating to the kinsoku rules and their Chinese and Korean equivalents. The top example on the slide shows a typical result when the last character on a line is followed by a small katakana character. The small katakana character begins the second line. This the tends to be the preference in modern Japanese typography, and is particularly useful in text with thin columns. The second example shows the result of a different approach, often referred to as 'strict'. The line wrapping algorithm now pulls down the last katakana character from the previous line so that the small katakana character is no longer in line-initial position, leaving a gap at the end of the line if the text is not justified.


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