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by kps
1359 days ago
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That doesn't reflect actual practice any more than the previous Unicode recommendation to use U+02BC MODIFIER LETTER APOSTROPHE (which at least had some semantic justification in that quote marks are not part of words). Yes, typographically an apostrophe looks much like a right single quote (although the position may be different); in the current century fonts handle that. |
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Except that they can’t, because (due to the limitations of ASCII), U+0027 had an overloaded meaning, seeing that the character had to cover both opening and closing quotes (as well as being used as a prime tick). Which is why pretty much every font I’ve seen has a straight glyph at U+0027, whereas the glyph at U+2019 is the one you’d usually want for an apostrophe. You can also observe that word processors follow the Unicode standard in this regard. E.g., after typing “they're” into Libre Office, once you copy-paste it, you’ll see that the ASCII single quote has turned into U+2019.