Why did Debian use the typewriter apostrophe (') instead of the closed curve quote (’) [closed]

The name of the pictureThe name of the pictureThe name of the pictureClash Royale CLAN TAG#URR8PPP












-1















I have been using Debian for quite a few years. Every now and then, when I write or read something I find it confusing what an author meant by it. I had a look at the wikipedia page, as well as this question . I found it pretty interesting that the Unicode consotrium puts it as being pretty context-dependant where in the 33 paqes of chapter 6 it says it depends on the context. But this doesn't tell the story as to why (') was used.



Another query is do all linux distributions do use 'typewriter apostrophe' as been shared on wikipedia rather than the classical closed quotation marks which is/was shared in handwriting.










share|improve this question













closed as off-topic by Jeff Schaller, JdeBP, Kusalananda, Thomas Dickey, Rui F Ribeiro Jan 27 at 20:40



  • This question does not appear to be about Unix or Linux within the scope defined in the help center.
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.











  • 1





    This really isn't on-topic. As indicated on the very closed as off-topic question that you point to, these are typographical questions that are not specific to Unix & Linux. It is really reaching to ask about Debian as if there were something specific to Debian here. It reads as bizarrely as asking why Debian spells the word "color" as it does, and asking whether other Linux distributions do too. This is not Unix & Linux stuff, and is based upon a faulty premise and a connection that does not exist.

    – JdeBP
    Jan 27 at 19:56






  • 1





    See also Is the tick or acute accent character (´) used for anything in Linux shell?.

    – Stephen Kitt
    Jan 27 at 21:59















-1















I have been using Debian for quite a few years. Every now and then, when I write or read something I find it confusing what an author meant by it. I had a look at the wikipedia page, as well as this question . I found it pretty interesting that the Unicode consotrium puts it as being pretty context-dependant where in the 33 paqes of chapter 6 it says it depends on the context. But this doesn't tell the story as to why (') was used.



Another query is do all linux distributions do use 'typewriter apostrophe' as been shared on wikipedia rather than the classical closed quotation marks which is/was shared in handwriting.










share|improve this question













closed as off-topic by Jeff Schaller, JdeBP, Kusalananda, Thomas Dickey, Rui F Ribeiro Jan 27 at 20:40



  • This question does not appear to be about Unix or Linux within the scope defined in the help center.
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.











  • 1





    This really isn't on-topic. As indicated on the very closed as off-topic question that you point to, these are typographical questions that are not specific to Unix & Linux. It is really reaching to ask about Debian as if there were something specific to Debian here. It reads as bizarrely as asking why Debian spells the word "color" as it does, and asking whether other Linux distributions do too. This is not Unix & Linux stuff, and is based upon a faulty premise and a connection that does not exist.

    – JdeBP
    Jan 27 at 19:56






  • 1





    See also Is the tick or acute accent character (´) used for anything in Linux shell?.

    – Stephen Kitt
    Jan 27 at 21:59













-1












-1








-1








I have been using Debian for quite a few years. Every now and then, when I write or read something I find it confusing what an author meant by it. I had a look at the wikipedia page, as well as this question . I found it pretty interesting that the Unicode consotrium puts it as being pretty context-dependant where in the 33 paqes of chapter 6 it says it depends on the context. But this doesn't tell the story as to why (') was used.



Another query is do all linux distributions do use 'typewriter apostrophe' as been shared on wikipedia rather than the classical closed quotation marks which is/was shared in handwriting.










share|improve this question














I have been using Debian for quite a few years. Every now and then, when I write or read something I find it confusing what an author meant by it. I had a look at the wikipedia page, as well as this question . I found it pretty interesting that the Unicode consotrium puts it as being pretty context-dependant where in the 33 paqes of chapter 6 it says it depends on the context. But this doesn't tell the story as to why (') was used.



Another query is do all linux distributions do use 'typewriter apostrophe' as been shared on wikipedia rather than the classical closed quotation marks which is/was shared in handwriting.







debian quoting history






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Jan 27 at 19:42









shirishshirish

3,81263185




3,81263185




closed as off-topic by Jeff Schaller, JdeBP, Kusalananda, Thomas Dickey, Rui F Ribeiro Jan 27 at 20:40



  • This question does not appear to be about Unix or Linux within the scope defined in the help center.
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.







closed as off-topic by Jeff Schaller, JdeBP, Kusalananda, Thomas Dickey, Rui F Ribeiro Jan 27 at 20:40



  • This question does not appear to be about Unix or Linux within the scope defined in the help center.
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.







  • 1





    This really isn't on-topic. As indicated on the very closed as off-topic question that you point to, these are typographical questions that are not specific to Unix & Linux. It is really reaching to ask about Debian as if there were something specific to Debian here. It reads as bizarrely as asking why Debian spells the word "color" as it does, and asking whether other Linux distributions do too. This is not Unix & Linux stuff, and is based upon a faulty premise and a connection that does not exist.

    – JdeBP
    Jan 27 at 19:56






  • 1





    See also Is the tick or acute accent character (´) used for anything in Linux shell?.

    – Stephen Kitt
    Jan 27 at 21:59












  • 1





    This really isn't on-topic. As indicated on the very closed as off-topic question that you point to, these are typographical questions that are not specific to Unix & Linux. It is really reaching to ask about Debian as if there were something specific to Debian here. It reads as bizarrely as asking why Debian spells the word "color" as it does, and asking whether other Linux distributions do too. This is not Unix & Linux stuff, and is based upon a faulty premise and a connection that does not exist.

    – JdeBP
    Jan 27 at 19:56






  • 1





    See also Is the tick or acute accent character (´) used for anything in Linux shell?.

    – Stephen Kitt
    Jan 27 at 21:59







1




1





This really isn't on-topic. As indicated on the very closed as off-topic question that you point to, these are typographical questions that are not specific to Unix & Linux. It is really reaching to ask about Debian as if there were something specific to Debian here. It reads as bizarrely as asking why Debian spells the word "color" as it does, and asking whether other Linux distributions do too. This is not Unix & Linux stuff, and is based upon a faulty premise and a connection that does not exist.

– JdeBP
Jan 27 at 19:56





This really isn't on-topic. As indicated on the very closed as off-topic question that you point to, these are typographical questions that are not specific to Unix & Linux. It is really reaching to ask about Debian as if there were something specific to Debian here. It reads as bizarrely as asking why Debian spells the word "color" as it does, and asking whether other Linux distributions do too. This is not Unix & Linux stuff, and is based upon a faulty premise and a connection that does not exist.

– JdeBP
Jan 27 at 19:56




1




1





See also Is the tick or acute accent character (´) used for anything in Linux shell?.

– Stephen Kitt
Jan 27 at 21:59





See also Is the tick or acute accent character (´) used for anything in Linux shell?.

– Stephen Kitt
Jan 27 at 21:59










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















2














Because Unix dates back to times where terminals where teletypes and had a rather limited character set, which eventually becomes standardized as ASCII. And ASCII only has straight single quote and double quote.






share|improve this answer





























    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes








    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    2














    Because Unix dates back to times where terminals where teletypes and had a rather limited character set, which eventually becomes standardized as ASCII. And ASCII only has straight single quote and double quote.






    share|improve this answer



























      2














      Because Unix dates back to times where terminals where teletypes and had a rather limited character set, which eventually becomes standardized as ASCII. And ASCII only has straight single quote and double quote.






      share|improve this answer

























        2












        2








        2







        Because Unix dates back to times where terminals where teletypes and had a rather limited character set, which eventually becomes standardized as ASCII. And ASCII only has straight single quote and double quote.






        share|improve this answer













        Because Unix dates back to times where terminals where teletypes and had a rather limited character set, which eventually becomes standardized as ASCII. And ASCII only has straight single quote and double quote.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Jan 27 at 19:57









        xenoidxenoid

        3,0751725




        3,0751725












            Popular posts from this blog

            How to check contact read email or not when send email to Individual?

            Bahrain

            Postfix configuration issue with fips on centos 7; mailgun relay