Straight Quote/Apostrophe Issues with HTML5 Output
I've run into a very weird problem when generating HTML5 after the latest Frame 2019 update to 15.0.7.973.
Wherever there are single straight quotes in text, if I generate HTML5, one of a couple of different things happens, based on the exact position/pairing of the apostrophe.
- If something says "clients' rights," the ouput removes both the apostrophe and the spacing, e.g. "clientsrights."
- If something says "client's right to appeal the decision," the output removes the apostrophe and everything after it, e.g., "client."
- The text removal doesn't run past the paragraph marker.
The text appears normal in the PDF output. The text appears fine in the Frame file. There is another oddity--when I prepared examples for this post, I copied the the relevant statement into a Word document. When I paste directly, the resulting text has the same issues as the HTML. If I paste as Unformatted, the text is correct.
I performed a lot of troubleshooting to figure out the issue, but I'm stumped for the moment:
- This problem didn't occur before updating.
- It occurs on multiple different machines, both physical and virtual.
- I have confirmed that copies on multiple machines that had not yet been updated (version 15.0.6.956) do not have this issue.
- All of the testing used the same files, settings, etc.
- It didn't matter if any of the files were on the local machine or network machine or both.
- If I copy/paste text from the version 15.0.6.956 update into a Word doc, it does not have the oddity mentioned above.
It seems conclusive that it is related to the update. I've checked all the settings that I can think of that might be related to this, but I haven't found anything obviously tied to it. I don't see anything about straight quotes or changes to paragraph styles. The Word oddity seems to point in the direction of some underlying paragraph tag issue or setting.
Does anyone have any thoughts about what the issue might be? I can find no other mentions of this issue anywhere. We recognize that we can use curly apostrophes/quotes and that is our temporary solution. However, we would prefer not to have our choices limited if they don't have to be.
