Emojis

Hi there Apple,

i would like to ask/say something rather important about the emojis!

my favourite food is pies, and as I look through the food section of the emojis, I find out there is NO pie emoji

i think you should make one as soon as you start making the new update.

THIS IS AN IMPORTANT MESSAGE

Posted on Jan 2, 2016 3:31 PM

Reply
21 replies

Jan 2, 2016 6:29 PM in response to Tom Gewecke

I am becoming aware of the complicated nature of this special FONT - key combos translate to UniCode numeric string = more than simple, yet not rocket science


it was my precise point that Apple Color Emoji do not display on non-Apple devices - nor would ANY FONT not universally installed or just-in-time via "jquery" on a webpage


diversity has its drawbacks

User uploaded file


EDITadded

It is my understanding that the tech designer - Apple for instance - provides key combos

  • " Ç " is an Apple key combo for which there requires a "series of alt keystrokes" to accomplish on a PC
  • The Apple Logo character - is a two modifier key + K on an Apple keyboard in ANY font and cannot be achieved in modern WinDoze version even with New Baskerville loaded

Jan 2, 2016 9:09 PM in response to Tom Gewecke

Tom Gewecke wrote:


ChitlinsCC wrote:

It is my understanding that the tech designer - Apple for instance - provides key combos

  • " Ç " is an Apple key combo for which there requires a "series of alt keystrokes" to accomplish on a PC
  • The Apple Logo character - is a two modifier key + K on an Apple keyboard in ANY font and cannot be achieved in modern WinDoze version even with New Baskerville loaded


What Apple provides is OS software which maps Unicode numbers to key combos. Users can access various different maps via system preferences/keyboard/input sources.


For Ç, Unicode number C7, the US input source maps the key combo alt + C, while the Spanish ISO input source maps a single key (printed | on a US hardware keyboard). On a Windows machine one would normally use the US International input source, which maps it to ' followed by C.


For the Apple logo, Unicode number F8FF, the US input source maps the key combo alt + K (alt shift k). Because this glyph is copyrighted by Apple, only Apple fonts have it. If you install an Apple font on a Windows machine, you should be able to see and type it. Windows input source maps don't include any simple key combo for F8FF, but you should still be able to type it in some apps like WordPad by typing F8FF followed by Alt +x.

Thanks for speeling it out


Ç is alt + 128 on the numeric keypad > then release in WinDoze - so instead of three keystrokes while holding the modifier "alt" (PLUS the SHIFT key, BTW) on the Mac, it takes 15 actions in WinDoze


My PB Pismo's display is shattered, so I am getting reacquainted with Windoze on a loaner Dell/Win8 lately


I thought I had thoroughly investigated the Apple Logo character (one of my favorites) - but it seems stupid to try if *I* can see it and everyone else can't


It does NOT display on my Win8 Dell - see this grab from my cookie cutter "help us help you" post (where the Logo character is supposed to be is obvious by its absence)

User uploaded file

Jan 2, 2016 4:33 PM in response to deggie

Not until now... interesting reading. Good luck on using Apple Color Emojis on non-Apple devices (and vice versa) - it's a FONT - AppleColorEmoji.ttf since Lion

User uploaded file

clearly from Font Book

IF I were to design a FontFace of ANY kind, I would need to comply with the UniCode standards fro assigning each "vector" image to a key combination = simple as that

Jan 3, 2016 8:49 AM in response to Tom Gewecke

My understanding...


At one time (and I actually did this when I worked at one joint), one needed to mickey around using the "Baskerville Old Face" font that had the logo character in it. My research on the subject a month or so ago did not indicate any solution for the lack of the font's inclusion in Win8 (and beyond?)


My solution at this point would simply be to use an image and paste it inline - User uploaded file- then resize - User uploaded file to taste = a pain in the ***

Jan 2, 2016 8:39 PM in response to ChitlinsCC

ChitlinsCC wrote:

It is my understanding that the tech designer - Apple for instance - provides key combos

  • " Ç " is an Apple key combo for which there requires a "series of alt keystrokes" to accomplish on a PC
  • The Apple Logo character - is a two modifier key + K on an Apple keyboard in ANY font and cannot be achieved in modern WinDoze version even with New Baskerville loaded


What Apple provides is OS software which maps Unicode numbers to key combos. Users can access various different maps via system preferences/keyboard/input sources.


For Ç, Unicode number C7, the US input source maps the key combo alt + C, while the Spanish ISO input source maps a single key (printed | on a US hardware keyboard). On a Windows machine one would normally use the US International input source, which maps it to ' followed by C.


For the Apple logo, Unicode number F8FF, the US input source maps the key combo alt + K (alt shift k). Because this glyph is copyrighted by Apple, only Apple fonts have it. If you install an Apple font on a Windows machine, you should be able to see and type it. Windows input source maps don't include any simple key combo for F8FF, but you should still be able to type it in some apps like WordPad by typing F8FF followed by Alt +x.

Jan 2, 2016 3:55 PM in response to We Like Pies

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apple_Color_Emoji

excerpts:

Apple Color Emoji is a color typeface used by iOS and OS X to display emoji, a series of ideograms originally created by Shigetaka Kurita for use in Japanese mobile phones.

...

...

The designers of the Apple Color Emoji typeface have not been publicly credited, following Apple's standard practice of not crediting work to individual developers, and former Apple employees have offered varying comments on who drew what, one calling it a 'perennial' project for interns. A few were designed, at least in early drafts, by Willem Van Lancker.

...

...

[emphasis is mine]

FYI, UniCode is the "standard for encoding" vector images for Fonts - not the "high court" of approval - all Fonts use UniCode > https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unicode

Jan 2, 2016 6:03 PM in response to ChitlinsCC

>>>I would need to comply with the UniCode standards fro assigning each "vector" image to a key combination = simple as that


UNicode doesn't say anything about key combinations. It assigns characters to numbers. How a particular device creates the numbers via keys or palettes or other means is up to the people who manufacture it.


NOn-apple devices have their own color fonts with their own designs to display emoji. There are also non-proprietary black/white fonts for emoji that all devices can use.

Jan 3, 2016 5:15 AM in response to ChitlinsCC

ChitlinsCC wrote:



Ç is alt + 128 on the numeric keypad > then release in WinDoze - so instead of three keystrokes while holding the modifier "alt" (PLUS the SHIFT key, BTW) on the Mac, it takes 15 actions in WinDoze


the Apple Logo character ...does NOT display on my Win8 Dell


Windows users who need to type Ç regularly will be using the US International layout where it is made just as easily as on a Mac.


Does your Dell have an Apple font installed? That's the only way the logo could be displayed, since Windows fonts do not include this copyrighted character.

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Emojis

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