curly quotes

From IndieWeb

curly quotes are pairs of quote marks that are shaped with curves to indicate the start and end of a quotation, like “ ” and ‘ ’ , and should be used in prose content and posts.

Why

You should use curly quotes in prose content for improved typography and better readability around quotations and as apostrophes in contractions and possessives.

How to

Different systems have different ways of entering curly quotes. You may find the following useful for copy/pasting:

“ ”   ‘ ’

How to type

On MacOS, you can type curly quotes as follows:

  • — option-[
  • — shift-option-[
  • — option-]
  • — shift-option-]

On browsers in general, you can create the following bookmarklets (curlypastelets or just pastelets) to choose and type the curly quotes you want:

IndieWeb Examples

References

Books and other notable references about smart quotes and usage thereof:

  • The Chicago Manual of Style: 6.115: “Smart” quotation marks
    • Calls the quotation marks “directional” and gives the alternative names “smart”, “typographer’s”, and “curly”.
    • States that using the “unidirectional” (ie. non-curly) quotation mark “signals a lack of typographical sophistication”.
  • Matthew Butterick: Straight and curly quotes (archived) from Practical Typography:
    • Compared to straight quotes, curly quotes are more legible on the page and match the other characters better. Therefore, straight quotes should never, ever appear in your documents.

    • Documents how to write the different symbols on both Windows and macOS.
    • Describes how to turn on automatic smart-quote substitution in word processing software.

Brainstorming

  • ...

Tools

Tools folks have found or suggested but no actual known IndieWeb usage thereof — try them out and see if they work for you and if so add it to your description in the IndieWeb Examples section.

  • John Gruber: SmartyPants (archived), Perl script fot automatically replacing straight quotes with curly ones (and some other typography replacements). Initially released in 2002 and updated through 2004.

See Also