[Solved] Turning off Smart Quotes
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- Posts: 9
- Joined: Mon Mar 29, 2010 7:42 pm
[Solved] Turning off Smart Quotes
Many if not most web browsers interpret the smart quotes (the curly " marks that auto-replace the normal quote marks) with broken icons. I tried tools: auto-correct options: replace "standard" quotes with "custom" quotes" but they still come up. How can I get normal quotes?
Thanks
Thanks
Last edited by Hagar Delest on Tue Mar 30, 2010 11:24 am, edited 1 time in total.
Reason: tagged [Solved].
Reason: tagged [Solved].
Open Office 3.20 / Windows XP
Re: Turning off Smart Quotes
Hi,
disable Replace under Custom Quotes → [see also the information under Options →
[M]: Replace while modifying existing text]
disable Replace under Custom Quotes → [see also the information under Options →
[M]: Replace while modifying existing text]
LibreOffice 4.0.4 · WinXP
Re: Turning off Smart Quotes
Can you give an example of this? I've not noticed it before.Many if not most web browsers interpret the smart quotes (the curly " marks that auto-replace the normal quote marks) with broken icons.
Also, I'm not entirely clear on what the quotes in Writer have to do with your web browser. Can you explain a little more about what you're trying to do?
AOO4/LO5 • Linux • Fedora 23
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- Posts: 9
- Joined: Mon Mar 29, 2010 7:42 pm
Re: Turning off Smart Quotes
Thanks, that worked.
[
quote="franx"]Hi,
disable Replace under Custom Quotes → [see also the information under Options →
[M]: Replace while modifying existing text][/quote]
[
quote="franx"]Hi,
disable Replace under Custom Quotes → [see also the information under Options →
[M]: Replace while modifying existing text][/quote]
Open Office 3.20 / Windows XP
Re: Turning off Smart Quotes
That may depend on Menu - View - Character set. You may want to experiment with Western (ISO8859-1), Unicode (UTF8), etc, until a page with curly quotation marks looks okay.Many if not most web browsers interpret the smart quotes (the curly " marks that auto-replace the normal quote marks) with broken icons.
OpenOffice 4.1.11 on Ubuntu; LibreOffice 6.4 on Linux Mint, LibreOffice 7.6.2.1 on Ubuntu
If your problem has been solved or your question has been answered, please edit the first post in this thread and add [Solved] to the title bar.
Nederlandstalig forum
If your problem has been solved or your question has been answered, please edit the first post in this thread and add [Solved] to the title bar.
Nederlandstalig forum
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- Posts: 9
- Joined: Mon Mar 29, 2010 7:42 pm
Re: Turning off Smart Quotes
Hmmm...
Well... I made a web page to demonstrate the problem for you, but both worked fine (i.e. with and without the smart quotes).
When I first began working on the Web in the late 90's I composed most of my posts using Word, then copy and pasted to my site. That was when I first noticed the problem. I used to I got a little box where the quotes were supposed to be, and so I always kept "smart quotes" turned off. I just assumed the same would be true with Open Office. We are having a storm right now so I decided to use my lap top for a study I am working on instead of my desk top in case we lose power, and it uses Open Office. Apparently this is no longer a problem.
Thanks for your help.
Well... I made a web page to demonstrate the problem for you, but both worked fine (i.e. with and without the smart quotes).
When I first began working on the Web in the late 90's I composed most of my posts using Word, then copy and pasted to my site. That was when I first noticed the problem. I used to I got a little box where the quotes were supposed to be, and so I always kept "smart quotes" turned off. I just assumed the same would be true with Open Office. We are having a storm right now so I decided to use my lap top for a study I am working on instead of my desk top in case we lose power, and it uses Open Office. Apparently this is no longer a problem.
Thanks for your help.
acknak wrote:Can you give an example of this? I've not noticed it before.Many if not most web browsers interpret the smart quotes (the curly " marks that auto-replace the normal quote marks) with broken icons.
Also, I'm not entirely clear on what the quotes in Writer have to do with your web browser. Can you explain a little more about what you're trying to do?
Open Office 3.20 / Windows XP
Re: Turning off Smart Quotes
Thanks for the follow up. I guessed that might be the case.
The problem was that Microsoft implemented their "smart quotes" in a way that was not standard or compatible with the rest of the web. OOo has always used the standard Unicode characters for the typographic ("curly") quotation marks, and they work fine with any recent browser.
The problem was that Microsoft implemented their "smart quotes" in a way that was not standard or compatible with the rest of the web. OOo has always used the standard Unicode characters for the typographic ("curly") quotation marks, and they work fine with any recent browser.
AOO4/LO5 • Linux • Fedora 23
Re: Turning off Smart Quotes
That's definitely the better approach.
I was too much focused on the topic "Turning off Smart Quotes".
But we shouldn't throw out the baby with the bathwater ...
[... or "reset the user profile" for every undetermined discrepancy ... ]
LibreOffice 4.0.4 · WinXP
Re: [Solved] Turning off Smart Quotes
How quotes effects your browser: document writing programs such as Microsoft Word and OpenOffice Writer change a left quote to a curly left quote, and a right quote to a curly right quote. Your browser interprets the curly quote as a special character, which it can't read, and replaces the quote with a big ugly question mark. However, you SHOULD NOT be using quotes within your text strings. They should be replaced with " Example: "The brown fox jumped over the fence"
Open Office 3.3 Windows 7 (64 bit)
Re: [Solved] Turning off Smart Quotes
Sorry, I'm not sure I understand your point.
As far as I know, there should be no problem using standard typographic (curly) quotes in html document text.
For example, does your browser have trouble with these? “ ”
OOo Writer uses the standard quote characters, and no special treatment is needed.
As far as I know, there should be no problem using standard typographic (curly) quotes in html document text.
For example, does your browser have trouble with these? “ ”
OOo Writer uses the standard quote characters, and no special treatment is needed.
AOO4/LO5 • Linux • Fedora 23