On 6/18/2021 6:05 PM, Thangalin wrote:
In HTML you should be able to use <q> – I know that doesn’t work reliably in browsers (some add straight quotes to my CSS-configured guillemets).
The Converter class maps token replacements:
https://github.com/DaveJarvis/keenquotes/blob/d6c9761f8fe1ae96391f25dc73be52... https://github.com/DaveJarvis/keenquotes/blob/d6c9761f8fe1ae96391f25dc73be52...
It'd be trivial to use <q> and </q>, instead. For my purposes, HTML entities work.
Using \quotation / \quote I avoid typing quotation marks in most cases.
When writing plain text documents, adding TeX code or HTML code to prescribe how the document should be presented is best avoided, so as to keep the document decoupled from a particular tool chain. YMMV. A deeper solution allows users to type the correctly curled quotes directly into the document. As with may things today this quote is rather english language centered .. tex operates in a multi lingual domain and quotes have always been dealt with using macros so that we can be sure we get the right ones (left/right) with the right spacing.
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