French spacing
In English, the space after some punctuation (most notably after period) is wider than a usual one; this is a standard behaviour of ConTeXt when typesetting in English. If you want to disable it, \frenchspacing
is the command in TeX (that also works in ConTeXt).
In ConTeXt, you may also setup the language instead:
\setuplanguage[en][spacing=packed]
Here is a nice tweak:
\enabledirectives[characters.spaceafteruppercase=normal] \vbox{\hsize 5em x. X\par x.\ X\par X. X\par X.\ X\par}
By default space after uppercase followed by punctuation is set to traditional
which enables a somewhat special hard coded hack in the tex engine where characters with sfcodes 999 nil a following spacecode setting, even when it's triggered by a \
.
Mixing broad and packed spaces
When current language is set to English, the default is to have broad spaces after punctuation marks.
But after an uppercase letter, ConTeXt applies a packed space. Using \null before the punctuation mark, gives a broad space.
If you need a packed space after a punctuation mark use \fsp[1] or simply use \ (backslash and space) after the punctuation mark.
This sample shows the commands in use:[2]
\startTEXpage[offset=1em, foregroundstyle={\tfd}] PhD. Next sentence PhD\null. Next sentence word. Next sentence word.\ Next sentence \stopTEXpage