I have exhausted my research and tried many methods to no effect and am hoping I'm overlooking some kind of simple solution:
I am using a Jekyll site to produce HTML files for e-mail and need to use HTML entities for special characters (such as em-dashes and smart quotes) in order to avoid improper symbol interpretation (the content-type/charset is at times stripped out of the e-mail head due to complexities I won't get into here.)
My problem is that parsing my Markdown appears to convert all of my written HTML entities into the special characters when output as HTML, and I am unable to escape with common methods. When I type ’ into markdown to produce a right curly quote it is converted to the ’ symbol within my HTML (instead of retaining ’ in my HTML). If I try to escape it with back-ticks it will not convert &rsquo in the HTML but it places it within <code> tags which cause it to render as ’ and not ’. Is there a way to retain typed-out HTML entities for special characters or -- even better -- convert special characters into to HTML entities (in the HTML) when parsed?
I am using the Kramdown markdown parser with Jekyll. I have even gone as far as specifying the entity_output option in Kramdown to : as_input without success. Any help is much appreciated!
In your _config.yml you can configure kramdown to leave html entities as they are written in your code with :
kramdown:
  entity_output: :as_input
See documentation.
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