On Tue, 2008-06-03 at 21:44 +0200, Nigel Henry wrote: > Is the single quote the same as an apostrophe? No, but a lot of things use them for the same thing. In plain old ASCII, you didn't have any alternative (only one character was available, and it was used for both purposes). With Unicode, you can use the proper typographical symbols (opening and closing single quotes, apostrophes, and accent marks are all *different* *things*). Depending on your keyboard options, the ' key on the keyboard might type an ASCII apostrophe (as I've just done) when you type it, or ´ when you hit the ' key twice (using a compose feature). > If not, where do I find the apostrophe character. There's the character map utility for things like that, you can search in it for "apostophe," rather than have to browse through it. Using a good font which draws them all differently will help you work out what's what, elsewhere. It's common enough, particularly for British keyboard users (thanks to the layout of the keyboard), to wrongly use the ` (grave accent) instead of ' (ASCII apostrophe) character. Likewise, it's common for people to wrongly use it as an opening single quote character. Which apart from looking crap, doesn't work well with speech synthesisers, or anything else which treats characters as what they were actually typed as, rather than what they might look like. Is what you're typing actually meant to use an "apostrophe" in the first place? It's about time keyboards were re-designed. We've got mostly useless arrays of function keys (hardly anybody uses more than the F1 key, in the grand scheme of things), yet most of the proper punctuation marks are completely absent, and require cryptic and varying techniques to type them. -- [tim@localhost ~]$ uname -r 2.6.25.3-18.fc9.i686 Don't send private replies to my address, the mailbox is ignored. I read messages from the public lists. -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list