272:TEX Quotes

TEX Quotes
Time Limit: 1000MS Memory Limit: 10000K
Total Submissions: 10913 Accepted: 5670

Description

TEX is a typesetting language developed by Donald Knuth. It takes source text together with a few typesetting instructions and produces, one hopes, a beautiful document. Beautiful documents use double-left-quote and double-right-quote to delimit quotations, rather than the mundane " which is what is provided by most keyboards. Keyboards typically do not have an oriented double-quote, but they do have a left-single-quote ` and a right-single-quote '. Check your keyboard now to locate the left-single-quote key ` (sometimes called the "backquote key") and the right-single-quote key ' (sometimes called the "apostrophe" or just "quote"). Be careful not to confuse the left-single-quote ` with the "backslash" key \. TEX lets the user type two left-single-quotes `` to create a left-double-quote and two right-single-quotes '' to create a right-double-quote. Most typists, however, are accustomed to delimiting their quotations with the un-oriented double-quote ". 

If the source contained 
"To be or not to be," quoth the bard, "that is the question." 
then the typeset document produced by TEX would not contain the desired form: "To be or not to be," quoth the bard, "that is the question." In order to produce the desired form, the source file must contain the sequence: 
``To be or not to be,'' quoth the bard, ``that is the question.'' 
You are to write a program which converts text containing double-quote (") characters into text that is identical except that double-quotes have been replaced by the two-character sequences required by TEX for delimiting quotations with oriented double-quotes. The double-quote (") characters should be replaced appropriately by either `` if the " opens a quotation and by '' if the " closes a quotation. Notice that the question of nested quotations does not arise: The first " must be replaced by ``, the next by '', the next by ``, the next by '', the next by ``, the next by '', and so on. 

Input

Input will consist of several lines of text containing an even number of double-quote (") characters. Input is ended with an end-of-file character.

Output

The text must be output exactly as it was input except that: 

  • the first " in each pair is replaced by two ` characters: `` and 
  • the second " in each pair is replaced by two ' characters: ''. 

Sample Input

"To be or not to be," quoth the Bard, "that
is the question".
The programming contestant replied: "I must disagree.
To `C' or not to `C', that is The Question!"

Sample Output

``To be or not to be,'' quoth the Bard, ``that
is the question''.
The programming contestant replied: ``I must disagree.
To `C' or not to `C', that is The Question!''

Source


#include<stdio.h>
int main(){
    int c,q = 1;
    while((c = getchar()) != EOF){
        if(c != '"') printf("%c",c);
        else { printf("%s",q ? "``" : "''"); q = !q; };
    }
    return 0;
}

Search Search v0.5.6 released 2020-02-24 (ti:"artificial intelligence" OR ti:"AI algorithm") AND submittedDate:[2020-01-01 TO 2024-12-31] AND language:en AND comment:"6 pages" OR comment:"7 pages" OR comment:"8 pages" All fields Show abstracts Hide abstracts Advanced Search Searching by Author Name Using the Author(s) field produces best results for author name searches. For the most precise name search, follow surname(s), forename(s) or surname(s), initial(s) pattern: example Hawking, S or Hawking, Stephen For best results on multiple author names, separate individuals with a ; (semicolon). Example: Jin, D S; Ye, J Author names enclosed in quotes will return only exact matches. For example, "Stephen Hawking" will not return matches for Stephen W. Hawking. Diacritic character variants are automatically searched in the Author(s) field. Queries with no punctuation will treat each term independently. Searching by subcategory To search within a subcategory select All fields. A subcategory search can be combined with an author or keyword search by clicking on add another term in advanced search. Tips Wildcards: Use ? to replace a single character or * to replace any number of characters. Can be used in any field, but not in the first character position. See Journal References tips for exceptions. Expressions: TeX expressions can be searched, enclosed in single $ characters. Phrases: Enclose phrases in double quotes for exact matches in title, abstract, and comments. Dates: Sorting by announcement date will use the year and month the original version (v1) of the paper was announced. Sorting by submission date will use the year, month and day the latest version of the paper was submitted. Journal References: If a journal reference search contains a wildcard, matches will be made using wildcard matching as expected. For example, math* will match math, maths, mathematics. If a journal reference search does not contain a wildcard, only exact phrases entered will be matched. For example, math would match math or math and science but not maths or mathematics. All journal reference searches that do not contain a wildcard are literal searches: a search for Physica A will match all papers with journal references containing Physica A, but a search for Physica A, 245 (1997) 181 will only return the paper with journal reference Physica A, 245 (1997) 181. About Help Contact Subscribe Copyright Privacy Policy Web Accessibility Assistance arXiv Operational Status Get status notifications via
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