On Wed, May 13, 2020 at 12:11:21PM +0200, Michael Kerrisk (man-pages) wrote: > Hello Dave, > > On 5/12/20 6:36 PM, Dave Martin wrote: > > Convert quote marks used for information terms in prose to use > > \(oq .. \(cq, for better graphical rendering. > > > > Signed-off-by: Dave Martin <Dave.Martin@xxxxxxx> > > Again, this is a patch that I would prefer to see near the end > of a series, rather than in the middle. > > I'm currently agnostic about this change. But, I do not > want to apply this patch, since no other pages in man-pages > use \(oq...\(cq. > > I haven't applied this patch. Luckily, that does not prevent > any of the later patches applying. I'll be careful to move this sort of thing to the end of a series in future. This was a provocative patch, so I'm happy for it to be dropped. The main motivation was that ' renders to PostScript etc. as a closing quote, which is fine for apostrophes but not fine for an opening quote mark. Most of the current quotes in here are actually ", but I don't see an actual promise from groff that that renders as a neutral glyph either, so it seemed best to avoid. For now " does seem to be rendered with a neutral glyph (i.e., neither opening or closing). > > --- > > > > Note, this can lead to misrendering on badly-configured systems. > > However, many man pages do it. > > Can you say some more about this please? Terminal character maps need to match LANG etc. in order for fancy characters coming out of nroff to display correctly. ssh attempts to send LANG across, but terminal sessions between systems that have different locales installed can be a problem, as can dumb serial links that don't magically pass the locale and terminal type settings across. The fact that I hit this problem a lot in some situations (particularly the serial link case) suggested to me that fancy characters are considered fine nowadays, but perhaps I'd need to dig into it some more to understand the situation fully. (There are one or two ' that should really be \(aq anyway, but I'll try to address that separately.) Cheers ---Dave