Printing emojisπŸ˜πŸŽ‰πŸ˜›πŸ˜›πŸ˜ in python 🐍🐍

Have you ever thought of inserting emojis into your python program? Well, if you haven't, you should start thinking of inserting one into some of your mini projects to make it fun😜. Emojis are now everywhere, even in programming now. In python now, there are three ways you could insert an emoji.

You could use unicodes

  • The Common Locale Data Repository(CLDR) names
  • The emoji module
  • Using the unicodes

Every emoji we use when chatting all have unicodes and we can use these unicodes in python to output these same emoji. Codes

# face with tears of joy
print("\U0001f602")

# face with tongue
print("\U0001f61b")

Output
πŸ˜‚
πŸ˜›

For the full emoji list, visit unicode.org/emoji/charts/full-emoji-list.html

Replace the "+" with "000". So "U+1F602" becomes "U0001F602".

Using CLDR names

Emojis also have CLDR short names. All the short names are provided in the link above.

Code

# face with tears of joy
print("\N{face with tears of joy}")

# face with tongue
print("\N{face with tongue}")

Output
πŸ˜‚
πŸ˜›

Using the emoji module

To install the module, run pip install emoji in your terminal. We will use the CLDR short names here by using the emojize() function. All spaces the the CLDR short names would be replaced by an underscore. Code

# Import the module
import emoji

print(emoji.emojize("Python is :thumbs_up:")
print(emoji.emojize("I :red_heart: python")

Output
Python is πŸ‘
I ❀️ python

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