Talk:Quotation mark glyphs

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This article was split from Quotation mark. For some early discussion about glyphs, including the debate about the split, see Talk:Quotation mark

[edit] Terminology

The informal use of the word "quote" as a noun can be ambiguous, and should be avoided in an encyclopedic article. Please see my more detailed comments at Talk:Quotation mark#TerminologyMichael Z. 2007-08-27 14:32 Z

[edit] Mac how-to

On the Apple Macintosh, many special characters are available by typing while holding down the option key, or option and shift keys together, and these are shown in the Keyboard Viewer. In Macintosh English-language keyboard layouts, the curved opening single quotation mark is typed option-], and a curved closing single quotation mark (apostrophe) is typed with the shortcut option-shift-].
Similarly, the curved curved “double” quotation marks are typed option-[ and option-shift-[.)

On mac OS X the Character Palette gives access to all the unicode characters, and can show the unicode tables giving the number. I've shown a version of the paragraphs above at Apostrophe#Entering typographic apostrophes which also shows how to enter unicode characters in MS Windows. Presumably this info should appear here, not sure how to organise it - a new subsection? ... dave souza, talk 11:02, 22 February 2008 (UTC)

I'm beginning to think we should have an article about the macintosh keyboard layout, since people seem so insistent on putting it in every article that mentions a non-ascii character. --Random832 (contribs) 19:45, 16 May 2008 (UTC)