This font has sketch lines meticulously drawn diagonally with very few, but still noticeable, blank spaces in between the lines. The meticulous detail really makes it stand out as bold headlines, logo text, and small-phrase accents.

Almost acting as a completely different font, the solid version can be used anywhere you would like an imperfect sans, even as standard body text. Its thick uniform strokes make it easy to read from a distance and are a great change of pace from the sketch version in the same project.


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A number of exports (PNG, JPG) have random blank space surrounding it. I specifically carved-out (masked) the exact image, it shows that way on the screen, and when I go to export there's this blank space around it. Doesn't usually happen. I export a lot, so I'm familiar with the process. What am I doing wrong?

It would help to see your layers panel with the layers for export selected. White space around for instance may occur on export when an Outer Shadow with Radius > 0 and colour opacity = 0 is applied. This would exceed the bounding box and get exported as white area.

Unfortunately I can't see in your screenshot a culprit for the additional space on export, respectively can't detect what exactly got exported or was selected for export as selection or is set in the collapsed layers.

It is not that there are only double spaces, there are many multiple spaces. I guess that I could run that query over and over, eventually it will all run true by removing only two consecutive blank spaces.

This will replace all double spaces with a single space. So a triple space then becomes a double space. You need to run the update untill you have no rows left that get updated... which is why you also need to have the where condition in there to close the loop at some point.

Lowell--help us help you! If you post a question, make sure you include a CREATE TABLE... statement and INSERT INTO... statement into that table to give the volunteers here representative data. with your description of the problem, we can provide a tested, verifiable solution to your question! asking the question the right way gets you a tested answer the fastest way possible!

LOL - I just noticed that my example was rendered as if run through a "space trimmer" also! The first literal should be two spaces, not one. the next two are one space each. Read between the lines and understand what is happening so you can add the extra spaces when you implement it.

Here's the deal. As I previously wrote in a story for the particle physics publication Symmetry, the size of an atom is governed by the average location of its electrons: how much space there is between the nucleus and the atom's amorphous outer shell.

If the nucleus were the size of a peanut, the atom would be about the size of a baseball stadium. If we lost all the dead space inside our atoms, we would each be able to fit into a particle of dust, and the entire human species would fit into the volume of a sugar cube.

But, as I explained in Symmetry, the mass of these quarks accounts for just a tiny per cent of the mass of the protons and neutrons. And gluons, which hold these quarks together, are completely massless.

If our atoms are mostly space, why can't we pass through things like weird ghost people in a weird ghost world? Why don't our cars fall through the road, through the centre of the Earth, and out the other side of the planet? Why don't our hands glide through other hands when we give out high fives?

It's time to reexamine what we mean by empty space. Because as it turns out, space is never truly empty. It's actually full of a whole fistful of good stuff, including wave functions and invisible quantum fields.

You can think about the empty space in an atom as you might think about an electric fan with rotating blades. When the fan isn't in motion, you can tell that a lot of what's inside of that fan is empty space. You can safely stick your hand into the space between the blades and wiggle your fingers in the nothingness.

The blades of the fan are akin to electrons zipping around the atom, occupying chunks of space with their wave functions. It's a painful reminder that what might seem like empty space can feel pretty solid.

Are you sitting down for this? Well, you're not really. Your butt isn't actually touching the chair you're sitting on. Since the meat of your atoms is nestled away in nuclei, when you 'touch' someone (or something), you aren't actually feeling their atoms.

Does anyone know what this blank space is on deck 8 on the Vista? I'm looking to book a balcony cabin across from this space and want to make sure I'm not going to regret it. I'm thinking maybe it's the kitchen. Thanks.

The "kitchen" is actually called the galley and it is on deck 3, the same deck as the dining room. The Lido deck galley is on deck 10. The space is probably cabin steward storage, a crew only stairwell or a laundromat and it shouldn't have any effect on your cabin.

It's probably a combination of crew storage, stairs, work area, etc, and a bit of exhaust pipes from the engine room up to the whale tail. There's some amount of 'empty space' on every deck in about that space, some are partly galley, etc.

It's probably a combination of crew storage, stairs, work area, etc, and a bit of exhaust pipes from the engine room up to the whale tail. There's some amount of 'empty space' on every deck in about that space, some are partly galley, etc.

That is the engine casing, as others have said, where the engine exhausts go up to the funnel. There may be some steward lockers around the periphery of this space, but the vast majority of that space is empty.

I don't book a cabin that is around any dead space because on the few times that I did it ended up being where the vacuum and other cleaning supplies are kept and especially where the ice cube maker is kept as the crew goes into this area a lot and in the morning its loud... anyways to each his own... that's just my opinion

Our first Carnival cruise was on the Fantasy with a similar gray space on the deck plans. It turned out to be some sort of pantry/storage and there was a door that slammed incessantly all night, every night. Guest Services said we were not hearing it - but we absolutely were. That was such an awful cruise that, initially, I wasn't sure I would ever cruise again. So glad we tried again!

I agree with SmileEH. I was just reading some threads on here a earlier this morning, in a thread titled "what rooms not to book"(for all cruise lines not just carnival) and a person mentioned the Conquest with a similar looking space to what you're looking at, and they said it was a terrible room. Lots of noise, commotion, etc. Perhaps it might be a similar to the ship you're looking at. Beware.

I booked 8292 on the Freedom a number of years ago, balcony, and it there was an empty space above my room. Had no problems at all until the last night coming home, when there was a loud slamming and banging noise that went on for hours!! Turns out that empty space (that looked like maybe it was the stairs), was a boiler room. I was up all night, was awful. It didn't only affect me, the people in my vicinity heard it too, we were all out in the hall congregating in our pj's at 3am. ?After that experience I never just "keep fingers crossed" with blank spaces near my room.

Due to page restrictions, I'm trying to reduce the blank space before and after chapter title in my report. I have tried numerous methods but nothing seems to work. I have tried the solutions outlined in and it reduces the space before chapter heading but I havent yet found anything that reduces the space after the heading. I also tried

I used "wall break" on a section of an exterior wall to make way for a balloon wall. The break occurred (on the exterior wall) where the center of interior wall intersects the exterior. There is a symbol that shows the wall break which look like a V @ the wall break. When I hatch 2x6 walls, a blank spot in the hatching is left behind where this symbol occurs. How do I fix this?

I hatched another wall (that had a wall break in it) using a solid hatch and quickly realized that the blank spot might occur because the wall connections at the corners in plan view are mitered. I looked around online and help in chief architect and cannot find how to change the mitered appearance in plan view. How do i change the way miter appears in plan view?

I originally tried that. Seems like Chief's default for wall corners is to miter them together. I did find that I could select the hatch (in plan view) and pull the end nodes way from the miter. However, to pull the hatch nodes into the miter does not work. The hatch just snaps back to the miter. Is there a default setting somewhere where i can change the way corner walls connect in plan view?

Seems maybe you have found a weakness of the wall hatch tool maybe. You can get the hatch to fill the corner the way you want but you will have to drag the interior drywall layer all the way through the wall intersection which is going to cause problems with your model.

I'm thinking the wall hatch tool is good for some things, but just filling in the stud layer (wall definitions) with a hatch produces better results. Just hurts to have to create a new wall definition just to handle simple hatching. 152ee80cbc

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