Werner LEMBERG <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > To avoid this, you need to decide what characters to use as quotes > > on a per-font basis. (None of the Postscript fonts I know have > > dedicated german quotes. Does Unicode?) > > Yes: > > U+201E DOUBLE LOW-9 QUOTATION MARK > U+201F DOUBLE HIGH-REVERSED-9 QUOTATION MARK
No, U+201F is not suitable for German quoting. In this combination, it looks like „this‟ which is clearly not appropriate. The usual pair is U+201E and U+201C, „this“ See also figure 6-3, p. 210 of Unicode 5.0 as well as the remark on p. 211, “All other quotation marks may represent opening or closing quotation marks depending on the usage”, which includes U+201C. The actual point with Verdana is that its U+201C character, “quotedblleft”, does not look like U+201C at all. U+201C has its broader end at the downside (like the German right quote) and not on the upside, as the Verdana glyph has. In fact, the Verdana glyph more closely resembles U+201F, which has its broader end at the upside and is not suitable for German quoting exactly for that reason. Gunnar