- From: Daniel Glazman <daniel.glazman@disruptive-innovations.com>
- Date: Mon, 03 Mar 2014 19:08:08 +0100
- To: Richard Ishida <ishida@w3.org>, public-digipub@w3.org, www International <www-international@w3.org>
On 03/03/14 18:47, Richard Ishida wrote: > [resending to public-digipub list, please don't reply to previous attempt] > > > There is a bug[1] raised against HTML5 to change the CSS used to render > quotation marks around the q element. > > Appropriate quotation marks vary from language to language. The bug was > raised because the current spec text puts quote marks outside the q > element that reflect the language of the quoted text, rather than that > of the surrounding text. Excellent point... > un «two 'drei ‚vier‘ fünf' six» sept > > or > > un «two "drei „vier“ fünf" six» sept The "Règles Typographiques en usage à l'Imprimerie Nationale" for french don't mention such a case. If I read correctly, the foreign (for french) prose is unmodified so their quotes should remain unchanged, without caring about the outer nesting level. I am not 100% sure about it though. FWIW, the same authoritative book does not give «» and <> for french nesting. «» are also used for inner quotes. </Daniel>
Received on Monday, 3 March 2014 18:08:41 UTC