I'd been trying to merge my favorite fonts, so that I could use them as my system default font. I succeeded merging two fonts using the zFont tool app, but when I tried to merge an emoji TTF file with a font file, it said it's a bitmap file and it's not supported. I also tried to merge them with FontForge, but I got the somewhat same error that said a bitmap file can't be merged. If you know any app or website that can merge an emoji with a font, I'd be happy to see your solution :)

we have been trying to create a font with different layers, but we are not able to make it work with some devices. We have been successful in building it for working with IE and Firefox, but it is not working for the other browsers (it is displaying only the black contourn).


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Different browsers/systems support different kinds of color fonts. There is a chapter about it in the handbook. And there are some recent additions for SVG-based color fonts that are only documented in the blog post: -features-in-glyphs-2-4

The main problem is that there are several formats of color fonts and most browsers do support only some of them. Firefox does support Colr/Cpal and SVG fonts, Internet explorer (win10) supplest those and Apples sbix and Safari only sbix. Chrome in win10 supports Colr/Cpal but not its own color format.

So you need sbix and Colr (or SVG) table to support most users.

Hi, I was tinkering around with some text in Photoshop 2018 and noticed not every Apple emoji in the font "Apple Color Emoji" was available. I figured they might be available in the most recent update, so I updated my Photoshop to the 2020 version, 21.2.0.

Now none of the emojis in this font work. Facepalm. The emojis show up in the glyphs window but not when you select them as text. The emojis in the font "EmojiOne" work, but I don't like those emojis. Can someone help me use "Apple Color Emoji" again?

Probably because Firefox has its own font configuration settings. On void, you had no other emoji fonts installed, so Firefox picked up the only one that you had. On NixOS, you have to change that in Firefox settings.

The default font settings are bit of a misnomer. It only adds a certain font to the top of fontconfigs list of fonts to use for the emoji family. But fontconfig will still prefer any other installed colour font when it does not recognize the preferred font as containing colour glyphs.

I mean, yes, it works but it never occurred to me (and other people I personally know) that emojis were even considered a font, initially, so having a link to that on the Discord Arch Wiki page would've prevented this thread in the first place

I don't quite get why you think this is in any way discord specific. It's a font, if you want certain fonts to be represented you need to install a relevant font package. Should every single gui application page have a link to emoji fonts just because you might run into them?

Does every single GUI package have an Arch Wiki page? No, they don't. In fact, most Linux GUI applications don't even use emojis.

Of course it's not Discord specific but, again, many people aren't initially aware that emojis are even considered a font.

It's stupid how discussions about contributing to the Arch Wiki always devolve into debates about how quality of life notes are somehow counterproductive; it only drives away new contributors and users.

You can use emojis in the terminal/everywhere you normally use a font. You'd have to expand this to literally every article if you think about it. In any case the wiki is open, if you feel this strongly about it you could add a new troubleshooting section on the discord article linking to the link we provided.

I really don't like the new Windows 11 redesigned emoji font (for various aesthetic reasons, and it's lack of country flags). Is there a way to completely override it with another font (say, the old Windows 10 Emojis, or some Linux/Apple emoji font)?

The reason the fallback font stopped working was IIRC because the underlying OS API functions changed in a way that made it impossible to detect when glyphs were missing, and instead we had to rely on the OS typeface itself doing the substitution.

I found out that there is a plugin Emoji Toolbar which has build support for Twemoji color (you enable it in the settings) but not in edit mode (At least on my Windows 10). I think this is a system thing kinda .

I'm trying to set up a custom Emoji Widget in order to type in International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA).

So I put the following Unicode characters as my "favorite emojis" :


(they are from the unicode range U+0250 to U+02AF, called "IPA Extensions")

But it looks like the font that you are using in the Touch Bar for the Emoji Widget can't display those characters (to the exception of the "" which is correctly displayed).

=> Could it be possible to have a setting to choose a particular Unicode font to be used ? (such as Doulos SIL or Quivira for example). If possible, such setting should be specific to each widget.

The problem is that I can't seem to use it in any of my Adobe CS6 apps. I create a text field and try to select the font in the character panel and the closest font I can get in the search bar is "Apple Casual".

I recently made great bookmarkable pages with font generators. Check out one of these pages: symbol font generator, calligraphy font generator, Instagram font generator / fonts for Insta and Facebook font generator. Bookmark one of these articles to get a better text font generator experience.

Last month, my coworker casually told me he still has a 2001 era DoCoMo phone, which isone of the first phones to have emoji (???: emoji first appeared in 1999, on DoCoMo phones,and DoCoMo phones alone). So I got ahold of this phone. Which charged, turned onand most importantly, TOTALLY had OG emoji:

I then took a 10 hour flight to Europe and, for lack of better things to dowhile watching every movie that came out this year, I drew every one of those emoji as a sprite.166 emoji in total, 12x12px each, in one of six colors. This was my first time doing pixelssprites, so I obviously fucked it up: I ended up with a bunch of random sprite sheets,each with a random number of sprites in it, which was a bit of a mess. Thankfully,Amanda Glosson, reigning queen of pixels, wrote me a script to transmogrify my mess intoindividual svgs. These individual SVGs, to be exact:

An update for the Segoe UI symbol font in Windows 7 and in Windows Server 2008 R2 is available

This article introduces an update to the Segoe UI symbol font in Windows 7 and in Windows Server 2008 R2. This update adds support for emoji characters and some control glyphs that are included in Windows 8 and in Windows Server 2012.

Emojis displayed on iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple Watch and Apple TV use the Apple Color Emoji font installed on iOS, macOS, watchOS and tvOS. Some Apple devices support Animoji and Memoji. Two Private Use Area characters are not cross-platform compatible but do work on Apple devices:

This article introduces an update to the Segoe UI symbol font in Windows 7 and in Windows Server 2008 R2. This update adds support for emoji characters and some control glyphs that are included in Windows 8 and in Windows Server 2012.


Note Emoji characters come from emoji-capable platforms and devices. The platforms or devices enable users to easily insert emoji characters into documents, email messages, or chat conversations by using an emoji picker feature or an emoji palette feature. In Windows 8 or in Windows Server 2012, these characters are inserted by using the on-screen keyboard.


For more information about the code points of the new added emoji characters, go to the following Unicode website:

I could go on. I really could. I could talk about the sad state of browser support for color fonts, or how to avoid mismatched emoji fonts in Firefox, or subtle issues with measuring emoji width on Windows, or how you need to install a separate package for emoji to work at all in Chrome on Linux.

From Wikipedia:Computer font: "A computer font is implemented as a digital data file containing a set of graphically related glyphs. A computer font is designed and created using a font editor. A computer font specifically designed for the computer screen, and not for printing, is a screen font."

The typesetting application TeX and its companion font software, Metafont, traditionally renders characters using its own methods. Some file extensions used for fonts from these two programs are *pk, *gf, mf and vf. Modern versions can also use TrueType and OpenType fonts.

You should give pacman the ability to manage your fonts, which is done by creating an Arch package. These can also be shared with the community in the AUR. The packages to install fonts are particularly similar; see Font packaging guidelines.

The creation of a subdirectory structure is up to the user, and varies among Linux distributions. For clarity, it is good to keep each font in its own directory. Fontconfig will search its default paths recursively, ensuring nested files get picked up.

For the Xserver to load fonts directly (as opposed to the use of a font server), the directory for your newly added font must be added with a FontPath entry. This entry is located in the Files section of your Xorg configuration file (e.g. /etc/X11/xorg.conf or /etc/xorg.conf). See #Older applications for more detail.

If you are seeing errors similar to this and/or seeing blocks instead of characters in your application then you need to add fonts and update the font cache. This example uses the ttf-liberation fonts to illustrate the solution (after successful installation of the package) and runs as root to enable them system-wide.

Almost all Unicode fonts contain the Greek character set (polytonic included). Some additional font packages, which might not contain the complete Unicode set but utilize high quality Greek (and Latin, of course) typefaces are: ff782bc1db

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