Converts defined emoticon symbols to Unicode emojis, supported on a variety of devices 1.
Usage:
>>> from __future__ import print_function >>> from markdown import markdown >>> text = 'I <3 you! :P' >>> print(markdown(text, ['mdx_unimoji'])) # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE <p>I <span class="emoji" style="color:red">❤</span> you! <span class="emoji">😛</span></p>
NOTE: The emojis are only replaced when whitespace-delimited on both sides!
The following options are accepted:
emoji
, the emoticon-to-list-of-aliases mapping,span_class
, the class name of the encompassing <span>
element (default: 'emoji'). No element is created if None
.An example with these custom settings:
>>> from mdx_unimoji import UnimojiExtension >>> img_heart = '<img alt="love" src="heart.png"/>' >>> img_tongue = '<img alt=":P" src="tongue.png"/>' >>> overrides = UnimojiExtension.EMOJI >>> overrides.update({img_heart: ['<3'], ... img_tongue: ':p :P :-p :-P'.split()}) >>> print(markdown(text, ... extensions=[UnimojiExtension(span_class='other', ... emoji=overrides)])) ... # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE <p>I <img alt="love" class="other" src="heart.png" /> you! \ <img alt=":P" class="other" src="tongue.png" /></p>
You can use the span_class
value in your CSS, e.g.:
.emoji {
font-family: "Apple Color Emoji", "Segoe UI Emoji",
"Noto Color Emoji", EmojiSymbols, "DejaVu Sans", Symbola;
}
To install and make available to Markdown, you can issue:
or
pip install --upgrade git+git://github.com/kernc/mdx_unimoji.git
Then use the above provided examples to figure your way around.
HF!
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