![]() ![]() In UTF-16 representation, the above would be \ud83c\udf4d\ud83c\udf3a\ud83c\udf8b\ud83c\udf55\ud83c\udf2d.īasically every modern (or modern-ish) filesystem in use today - APFS, HFSJ+, ext4/ext3/ext2, ZFS, NTFS, exFAT, and even FAT32/FAT16/FAT12 (thanks to Microsoft’s backwards-compatible “Long Filename” feature) supports storing and retrieving unicode characters as filenames or directory names.In UTF-8 representation, the above would be \圆1\圆9\x75\圆5\圆f. ![]() ![]() In UTF-16 representation, the above would be \u3042\u3044\u3046\u3048\u304a.Īiueo (same thing as above, but now with Latin characters).あいうえお (a i u e o, the 5 vowels written in Japanese hiragana script) Which is basically text.īasically, what this means is that emoji are actually encoded and handled in the same way that say, a Japanese character would be. What I mean is that they’re Unicode codepoints. This may seem very counterintuitive, but emoji are actually text. ![]()
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