You should space once after an exclamation point at the end of a sentence, just like you would after a period or a question mark. This is the standard practice in modern writing, following the conventions of most style guides. Using a single space helps maintain readability and consistency in text formatting.
It depends on your own preference. Traditionally there should only be one space.
It depends on your own preference. Traditionally there should only be one space.
Two, just as after a period. However, if it is used in a quote, and that is not the end of a sentence, follow with only one space. Examples: The British are coming! Run! (Space twice) He said "The British are coming!" and ran out the door. (Space once)
You space between all words in a sentence.
I was taught to put one after a comma or a semicolon and two after a colon or after a sentence (after a period, an exclamation mark or a question mark). However, some applications, like WikiAnswers, automatically reduce every occurrence of two spaces to one space.
You use one space after a colon or semi-colon.
You can arrange them as many times as you want. However, there are a limited number of orders to put them in, 10! (That's ten factorial, not an exclamation point.) 10x9x8x7x6x5x4x3x2x1 ways, or 3628800 ways.
"He reiterated that point many times throughout his speech."
You may be reeling it in too early. Be sure to reel the Pokemon in when an exclamation point appears above your character. In Ruby, Sapphire, and Emerald, you'll have to do this multiple times.
Normally two spaces indicates the end of a sentence.
If the text is being displayed or printed with a normal "kerned" font, then all punctuation should be followed by a single space. Double spacing should only be used for monospaced fonts (eg Courier), but even then only for sentence-ending punctuation like question marks, exclamation points and full stops (periods). This convention dates back to the days of the typewriter, which used monospace fonts.
2 Times. Most people would just use one space. Computers and word processors adjust the spacings automatically.