![]() ![]() But a user who uses OpenType-ignorant software, or does not know how to access the case feature ( Case-Sensitive Forms), may be able to settle for this as a compromise shape in the context of caps. … then the mixed-case marks will be almost okay for all-cap setting. Select them with your Select tool (shortcut V) and mirror them horizontally and vertically with the two mirror buttons in the Transformations panel: Then open the inverted marks for editing, and you will find the upright marks as components. So, you choose Glyph > Add Glyphs… (Cmd-Shift-G) and paste the following lines into the dialog that appears: exclam=exclamdown In the very most cases, you will even get away by making them exactly the same. Any optical correction you want to apply to the shapes needs to respect that. The first and foremost rule is that the inverted marks are optically equal to their upright counterparts. The Filipino dialect Waray-Waray has no official orthography, and to my knowledge, the inverted marks are not in use in written Waray-Waray. ![]() But there are not that many Asturian texts. I have seen them in use in Asturian texts. They are not in use in Catalan at all, in case anyone tried to pass that myth to you. For proper high-brow typography, they are still a must, though.Ĭontrary to popular belief (and to what Wikipedia claims), they have not been required, and are hardly in use, in Galician for quite some time now. Or on most mobile devices, where they are a bit of a pain to type. In recent years, most Spanish speakers will admit that they have not been using them consistently anymore, especially in casual texts. They can be typed on most Latin keyboards, not only on Spanish teclados. They appear at the begging of a sentence as well as mid-sentence, so as to emphasize just the part of the sentence that needs emphasizing. exclamdown: the inverted exclamation mark ¡ with Unicode value U+00A1.questiondown: the inverted question mark ¿ with Unicode value U+00BF.Castilian Spanish orthography requires two special punctuation marks: ![]()
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