Bug 88270 - Hebrew Smart Quotes Symbols Inconsistent When Switching Between Languages
Summary: Hebrew Smart Quotes Symbols Inconsistent When Switching Between Languages
Status: UNCONFIRMED
Alias: None
Product: LibreOffice
Classification: Unclassified
Component: Writer (show other bugs)
Version: 4.3.5.2 release
Hardware: Other All
: medium normal
Assignee: Not Assigned
QA Contact:
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Depends on:
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Reported: 2015-01-10 15:16 UTC by Amir Adar
Modified: 2015-01-18 15:59 UTC (History)
1 user (show)

See Also:
i915 platform:
i915 features:


Attachments
An image of the issue (22.51 KB, image/png)
2015-01-10 15:17 UTC, Amir Adar
Details

Description Amir Adar 2015-01-10 15:16:32 UTC
Problem description: The symbols used for Hebrew smart quotes change when switching between different languages.

Steps to reproduce:

1. With smart quotes enabled, type an English sentence in quotes (Make sure the paragraph's language is set to English).

2. In a new paragraph, write a Hebrew sentence in quotes and change the paragraph's language to Hebrew.

3. In a new paragraph, write a German sentence in quotes and change the paragraph's language to German.

4. In a new paragraph, write another Hebrew sentence in quotes and change the paragraph's language to Hebrew.

Current behavior:

The two Hebrew sentences have a different pair of curved quotation marks.

Expected behavior:

The two Hebrew sentences should have the same pair of quotation marks.

Additional info:

I asked a question regarding the smart quotes feature, which is not exactly the same as this bug but I believe it might be related: http://ask.libreoffice.org/en/question/44371/funky-smart-quotes-behaviour/

Enclosed is an image of the problem.
Comment 1 Amir Adar 2015-01-10 15:17:16 UTC
Created attachment 112060 [details]
An image of the issue
Comment 2 Urmas 2015-01-10 22:21:56 UTC
I don't see any problems on your screenshot. You need to explain what do you want to see and why.
Comment 3 Amir Adar 2015-01-11 06:55:35 UTC
If you look at the two Hebrew sentences, to the right, you will see that they are enclosed with a different pair of quotation marks for each: in the first sentence, both quotation marks are above the letters, with the curve turned inwards, and in the first sentence, the first quotation mark is below the letters, and the curve is turned outwards. The quotation mark symbols have changed, depending on the language that was used before switching to Hebrew. The language used before should not affect the settings of another language's autocorrect features, and so the Hebrew smart quotes should use the same symbols persistently.
Comment 4 tommy27 2015-01-18 15:59:37 UTC
let's revert status to UNCONFIRMED after user feedback.


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