it depends u can either do "to be or not to be, that is the question" or 'a horse, a horse , my kingdom for a horse'
You should have a key next to your left enter button that shows double quotation marks. Normally, to type double quotations you woud hold the shift key and press this button. To do a single quotation simply hit this button without holding shift. That is how it works on my keyboard at least.
The quotation marks on your computer may appear weird due to the default settings of the keyboard or the software you are using. You can adjust the settings to change the appearance of the quotation marks.
Type quotation marks, type something original, then type quotation marks again. There's your quote
Type quotation marks, type something original, then type quotation marks again. There's your quote
Quotation marks signal to the reader that the information is a direct quotation.
Quotes
No. It depends on the data type. So numbers would not be in quotation marks for example.
A data type consisting of more than one letter, like a word or a sentence. A single letter is normally known as a character data type. Normally strings are enclosed in double quotation marks and single letters are enclosed in single quotations marks: 'a' "animal"
No, the quotation marks go after the comma or period.
To correctly type a quote, type an open quotation mark, then the exact quotation, then a closed quotation mark. Punctuation that is part of the quote goes in the quotation marks and all other punctuation goes outside of the quotation marks. To indicate you've skipped some words, use an ellipsis, and use brackets to indicate that you've changed words.
You would type "/smoke" without the quotation marks.
To correctly type the name of a work of art the title is in quotation marks followed by size, artist and date.