In a sentence like "The answer is 0.8." the period looks awkward after "0.8". Is there a rule for a situation like this? Sometimes I put a space before the period like this: "The answer is 0.8 ." However, that looks awkward too.
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Well, you have two options:
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Either rewrite the sentence or paragraph so it doesn't end with the number, or write it as you should with any normal sentence and put a period at the end:
That looks much neater to me than If you're not dealing with mathematics or plain numbers, then another approach is to mention the units (which is often a good idea anyway):
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When we use a number without a decimal point at the end of a sentence, we use a period in a way we use it after the last word. The same rule should be applied for ending the sentence whether it ends with a word or a number, with or without a decimal. If you refer to some accounting books, they use it the same way you have used in your example.
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It doesn't look strange to me, and it's not wrong. Certainly, you don't want to The other advice you received is good: |
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I will write it as: The answer is 0·8. I have used an interpunct ( |
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1.is different from just1. – belisarius Sep 20 '11 at 1:52