Yes, you are right! By the way it is good to know where different type of 
quotes are used and what their role?

Mohammad

On Wednesday, August 8, 2018 at 7:32:27 AM UTC+4:30, TonyM wrote:
>
> Mohammad,
>
> That is a great tip. I suppose I was talking about when setting 
> parameters, and your example is in WikiText.
>
> But I will use that.
>
>
> On Wednesday, August 8, 2018 at 12:46:18 PM UTC+10, Mohammad wrote:
>>
>> Tony!
>>  I use triple quotes to create a paragraph in a list.
>> see below
>>
>>
>> * One
>> * """ Two 
>> This is a muliline item!
>> """
>> * Third
>>
>>
>> Is there other uses and differences?
>>
>> Mohammad
>>
>> On Wednesday, August 8, 2018 at 4:11:00 AM UTC+4:30, TonyM wrote:
>>>
>>> Jed et al..
>>>
>>> Yes this is important, and I did not actually see why double doublequote 
>>> is not there, thanks Jed
>>>
>>> This is how I understand it.
>>>
>>> =undelimited-name
>>> ='undelimited-name'
>>> ='delimited name'  ie space in name is a delimiter so need quotes
>>> ='' empty single quotes empty value
>>> ="delimited name" 
>>> ="" empty double quotes empty value
>>> ="""delimited name""" 
>>>
>>> I believe the same is true when setting defaults in macros
>>> \define macro-name(value:"value here" 2ndval)
>>> I have not tested every case
>>> and when calling macros
>>>
>>> <<macro-name "value here">> based on position
>>>
>>> <<macro-name 2ndval="value here">> based on name
>>>
>>>
>>> *The idea is a particular quote method allows anything but that quote 
>>> method itself to exist between the quotes.*
>>>
>>> A good example is using wikify which is likely to have double quotes in 
>>> it so we use """triple double-quotes so we can "quote" in here"""
>>>
>>> With this specified a little more at 
>>> https://tiddlywiki.com/#Filter%20Run and *other places* on 
>>> tiddlywiki.com
>>>
>>> Regards Tony
>>>
>>> On Wednesday, August 8, 2018 at 6:11:09 AM UTC+10, Jed Carty wrote:
>>>>
>>>> The only difference between ", """ and ' is what they match with. There 
>>>> are multiple options so that you can have " or ' inside a string literal. 
>>>> There is no difference in their meaning.
>>>>
>>>> "" isn't used aside to indicate an empty string.
>>>>
>>>

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