Second paragraph of abstract is not indented, ideas for why or hacks to force it [on hold]












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Latex, for some reason is not indenting the second paragraph of my abstract. When I create a new document that near empty empty, it indents as intended, so there must be some insane conflict somewhere.



Is there any type of package that may have caused this? Is there any way I can just... force a tab? Putting par does nothing as well.



I'm using the acmart document class.










share|improve this question















put on hold as unclear what you're asking by Kurt, Marcel Krüger, JouleV, marmot, Raaja 2 days ago


Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.














  • 5





    The answer to this depends highly on the document class you're using, which you haven't specified. Without more information on what environment this is happening in, I doubt that you'll get any useful answers.

    – barbara beeton
    Feb 12 at 19:50






  • 4





    Either the class intends to have indented paragraphs and you have an error in your markup, or the class implements unindented paragraphs, but if you do not show any code it is very hard to guess what you have done wrong

    – David Carlisle
    Feb 12 at 20:46






  • 3





    I just tried a short example with the acmart document class and the second paragraph of the abstract did get indented. So whatever you do it must be something non-standard, because the class would normally be inclined to add the indentation. I guess we can only really help you if you show us a short example document (often called MWE: tex.meta.stackexchange.com/q/228/35864) that show us what you are doing and reproduces the undesirable behaviour you are inquiring about with as little code as possible.

    – moewe
    Feb 13 at 7:11
















0















Latex, for some reason is not indenting the second paragraph of my abstract. When I create a new document that near empty empty, it indents as intended, so there must be some insane conflict somewhere.



Is there any type of package that may have caused this? Is there any way I can just... force a tab? Putting par does nothing as well.



I'm using the acmart document class.










share|improve this question















put on hold as unclear what you're asking by Kurt, Marcel Krüger, JouleV, marmot, Raaja 2 days ago


Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.














  • 5





    The answer to this depends highly on the document class you're using, which you haven't specified. Without more information on what environment this is happening in, I doubt that you'll get any useful answers.

    – barbara beeton
    Feb 12 at 19:50






  • 4





    Either the class intends to have indented paragraphs and you have an error in your markup, or the class implements unindented paragraphs, but if you do not show any code it is very hard to guess what you have done wrong

    – David Carlisle
    Feb 12 at 20:46






  • 3





    I just tried a short example with the acmart document class and the second paragraph of the abstract did get indented. So whatever you do it must be something non-standard, because the class would normally be inclined to add the indentation. I guess we can only really help you if you show us a short example document (often called MWE: tex.meta.stackexchange.com/q/228/35864) that show us what you are doing and reproduces the undesirable behaviour you are inquiring about with as little code as possible.

    – moewe
    Feb 13 at 7:11














0












0








0








Latex, for some reason is not indenting the second paragraph of my abstract. When I create a new document that near empty empty, it indents as intended, so there must be some insane conflict somewhere.



Is there any type of package that may have caused this? Is there any way I can just... force a tab? Putting par does nothing as well.



I'm using the acmart document class.










share|improve this question
















Latex, for some reason is not indenting the second paragraph of my abstract. When I create a new document that near empty empty, it indents as intended, so there must be some insane conflict somewhere.



Is there any type of package that may have caused this? Is there any way I can just... force a tab? Putting par does nothing as well.



I'm using the acmart document class.







paragraphs abstract acmart






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Feb 12 at 20:28







Anders Miltner

















asked Feb 12 at 19:37









Anders MiltnerAnders Miltner

13




13




put on hold as unclear what you're asking by Kurt, Marcel Krüger, JouleV, marmot, Raaja 2 days ago


Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.









put on hold as unclear what you're asking by Kurt, Marcel Krüger, JouleV, marmot, Raaja 2 days ago


Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.










  • 5





    The answer to this depends highly on the document class you're using, which you haven't specified. Without more information on what environment this is happening in, I doubt that you'll get any useful answers.

    – barbara beeton
    Feb 12 at 19:50






  • 4





    Either the class intends to have indented paragraphs and you have an error in your markup, or the class implements unindented paragraphs, but if you do not show any code it is very hard to guess what you have done wrong

    – David Carlisle
    Feb 12 at 20:46






  • 3





    I just tried a short example with the acmart document class and the second paragraph of the abstract did get indented. So whatever you do it must be something non-standard, because the class would normally be inclined to add the indentation. I guess we can only really help you if you show us a short example document (often called MWE: tex.meta.stackexchange.com/q/228/35864) that show us what you are doing and reproduces the undesirable behaviour you are inquiring about with as little code as possible.

    – moewe
    Feb 13 at 7:11














  • 5





    The answer to this depends highly on the document class you're using, which you haven't specified. Without more information on what environment this is happening in, I doubt that you'll get any useful answers.

    – barbara beeton
    Feb 12 at 19:50






  • 4





    Either the class intends to have indented paragraphs and you have an error in your markup, or the class implements unindented paragraphs, but if you do not show any code it is very hard to guess what you have done wrong

    – David Carlisle
    Feb 12 at 20:46






  • 3





    I just tried a short example with the acmart document class and the second paragraph of the abstract did get indented. So whatever you do it must be something non-standard, because the class would normally be inclined to add the indentation. I guess we can only really help you if you show us a short example document (often called MWE: tex.meta.stackexchange.com/q/228/35864) that show us what you are doing and reproduces the undesirable behaviour you are inquiring about with as little code as possible.

    – moewe
    Feb 13 at 7:11








5




5





The answer to this depends highly on the document class you're using, which you haven't specified. Without more information on what environment this is happening in, I doubt that you'll get any useful answers.

– barbara beeton
Feb 12 at 19:50





The answer to this depends highly on the document class you're using, which you haven't specified. Without more information on what environment this is happening in, I doubt that you'll get any useful answers.

– barbara beeton
Feb 12 at 19:50




4




4





Either the class intends to have indented paragraphs and you have an error in your markup, or the class implements unindented paragraphs, but if you do not show any code it is very hard to guess what you have done wrong

– David Carlisle
Feb 12 at 20:46





Either the class intends to have indented paragraphs and you have an error in your markup, or the class implements unindented paragraphs, but if you do not show any code it is very hard to guess what you have done wrong

– David Carlisle
Feb 12 at 20:46




3




3





I just tried a short example with the acmart document class and the second paragraph of the abstract did get indented. So whatever you do it must be something non-standard, because the class would normally be inclined to add the indentation. I guess we can only really help you if you show us a short example document (often called MWE: tex.meta.stackexchange.com/q/228/35864) that show us what you are doing and reproduces the undesirable behaviour you are inquiring about with as little code as possible.

– moewe
Feb 13 at 7:11





I just tried a short example with the acmart document class and the second paragraph of the abstract did get indented. So whatever you do it must be something non-standard, because the class would normally be inclined to add the indentation. I guess we can only really help you if you show us a short example document (often called MWE: tex.meta.stackexchange.com/q/228/35864) that show us what you are doing and reproduces the undesirable behaviour you are inquiring about with as little code as possible.

– moewe
Feb 13 at 7:11










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