Zero Space

Zero-width space

The zero-width space (ZWSP) is a non-printing character used in computerized typesetting to indicate word boundaries in scripts without explicit spacing or after certain characters that don't have a visible space but may cause a line break. It is commonly used in languages like Japanese where words lack visible spaces. While normally not visible, it may expand in fully justified passages.

1 courses cover this concept

15-354 Computation & Discrete Math

Carnegie Mellon University

Spring 2021

This advanced course reexamines traditional concepts of discrete mathematics (relations, functions, logic, graphs, algebra, automata) in the context of computation and algorithms, necessitating a strong background in discrete math.

No concepts data

+ 23 more concepts