On 2 December 2016 at 15:26, Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org> wrote:
I see, thanks. Is it certain that users won't want straight quotes,
but not the curly ones? E.g., in some programming mode, perhaps?
I don't think this is a problem, because in that case, the user won't type curly quotes. If the left curly quote (single or double) were widely used on its own in a programming language, that would be a problem, but I don't think it is.
The reason I added the curly quotes to electric-pair-pairs as well as electric-pair-text-pairs is because the latter is only used in comments, and so would not be available in text-mode, where curly quotes are useful.
So electric-pair-mode is incompatible with RTL scripts. Too bad.
It seems to work for me: if I select a Hebrew keyboard layout, type some Hebrew letters, and then use double straight quotes, I get the expected result. If I use curly quotes, I get a different result, but perhaps that it because it implicitly changes the writing direction? I didn't get as far as trying to configure electric-pair-mode to understand Hebrew quotation marks.
I guess I should have said "open" and "close" rather than "left" and "right".
If you're happy with my argument above about programming languages, I'll install the change.