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The line spacing following a secondary title should typically be double-spaced in most academic or professional documents to improve readability and separate the different sections effectively.
i think it should be single
After the main title, it is common to use double line spacing. However, the specific line spacing may vary depending on the formatting guidelines provided by the relevant style guide or publication.
On Microsoft Word, you use a 2.0 line spacing.
Within each source, use double spacing. Between each source, use a single space to separate them. This helps to maintain readability and organization within the document.
single double triple quadruple
just type the essay as you normally would. when you are finished, hi light the whole thing and change the line spacing to 2.
Double
<style type="text/css> line-space: #px; </style> I think that's it
Random person in the world to the rescue! Okay, so you're trying to write a research paper, or a story and you need a title page. Uh-oh. You don't know how to make one. Well, here goes! About one-third of the way down from the TOP OF THE PAGE,type/write out the title of the story/paper. Next, you type/write out your name about two-thirds of the way down the page. The next line down (NOT double-spaced!), put your teacher/professor's name. The next line down, the class. The next line after that, the date the paper or story is due. That's right. The date that it's due. About one-third of the way down from the TOP OF THE PAGE,type/write out the title of the story/paper. For example: (Top of Paper) Research Paper Sarah Deens Ms. Jean Thompson Honors Psychology 1 12 December 2007 (Bottom of Paper) Tada! There you have it. There are other ways of doing it, but this is mainly for research paper use. Enjoy!
fa
title bar It is called Insertion point