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bug#21472: 25.0.50; REGRESSION: (emacs) `Coding Systems' uses curly quot


From: Paul Eggert
Subject: bug#21472: 25.0.50; REGRESSION: (emacs) `Coding Systems' uses curly quotes for Lisp strings
Date: Tue, 15 Sep 2015 12:15:25 -0700
User-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:38.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/38.2.0

Eli Zaretskii wrote:

This sentence:
   On a decentralized version control system, push changes from the
   current branch to another location.

where "push" was quoted, is now reads like incorrect English

Why? It's idiomatic English to talk about pushing changes in a dVCS. See, for example, <http://docs.telerik.com/platform/appbuilder/version-control/third-party-vc/push-changes>, which says “You push changes from your local AppBuilder repository to your remote Git repository.”

   The external border is normally not shown on fullboth and mazimized
   frames.

Previously, "fullboth", which is not a word, was quoted to indicate
that it's not a real word.

As I understand it the section is intended to define “fullboth” as an invented English word, which is fine: the invented word should be defined with @dfn (which quotes the word in info files), and other uses of the word should appear unquoted just like any other word. This is standard English style. The manual should not quote every use of a neologism, as scare quotes are not a good style for a manual.

That being said, there were problems with the section: it did not use @dfn to define “fullboth”, and the paragraph defining “fullboth” was written awkwardly. I just now installed a followup patch to fix that. I added index entries while I was at it.

Many places have a quoted text replaced by @dfn, although there's no
terminology here that we describe or index.

Examples?  I put in @dfn when I thought the text was defining a term.

Indexing is a separate axis. If the text uses a term that should be indexed, the index entry should be created regardless of whether the text surrounds a term with @dfn or with ``...'' or with nothing at all. By and large my recent large patch worried about quoting, not about indexing.





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