Hi, Doug wrote: > Still, this is a cautionary tale. What other sorts of > documents would suffer badly under this change?
groff_char(7) here currently contains Output Input PostScript Unicode Notes ... \[oq] \e[oq] quoteleft u2018 single open (left) quote \[cq] \e[cq] quoteright u2019 single closing (right) quote and renders as Output Input PostScript Unicode Notes ... ` \[oq] quoteleft u2018 single open (left) quote ' \[cq] quoteright u2019 single closing (right) quote That «`» would become a «'». Technically correct, that is the new `Output', but hides some history and may make things less clear. Ingo, you originally mentioned However, the -T ascii output device still renders \(oq as "accent grave", also affecting macro packages that implement single quoting macros in terms of \(oq, for example mdoc(7) .Sq. If it's the `modern' mdoc output that's primarily of concern, could its macros that use \(oq make a subjective choice to pretty it up for -Tascii and -Tlatin1? I doubt many worry about old mdoc source rendering differently over time. :-) And it would leave the rest of the world alone for those of us with symmetric «`'», old documents, and groff_char(7). -- Cheers, Ralph.