Using Emojis in HTML


Using Emojis in HTML

What are Emojis?

Emojis look like images, or icons, but they are not.

They are letters (characters) from the UTF-8 (Unicode) character set.

UTF-8 covers almost all of the characters and symbols in the world.


The HTML charset Attribute

To display an HTML page correctly, a web browser must know the character set used in the page.

This is specified in the <meta> tag:

<meta charset="UTF-8">

If not specified, UTF-8 is the default character set in HTML.


UTF-8 Characters

Many UTF-8 characters cannot be typed on a keyboard, but they can always be displayed using numbers (called entity numbers):

  • A is 65
  • B is 66
  • C is 67






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Example Explained

The <meta charset="UTF-8"> element defines the character set.

The characters A, B, and C, are displayed by the numbers 65, 66, and 67.

To let the browser understand that you are displaying a character, you must start the entity number with &# and end it with ; (semicolon).


Emoji Characters

Emojis are also characters from the UTF-8 alphabet:

  • 😄 is 128516
  • 😍 is 128525
  • 💗 is 128151

Sized Emojis


Sized Emojis

Since Emojis are characters, they can be copied, displayed, and sized just like any other character in HTML.







Live Demo & Try it yourself!

Some Emoji Symbols in UTF-8

EmojiValue
🗻&#128507;
🗼&#128508;
🗽&#128509;
🗾&#128510;
🗿&#128511;
😀&#128512;
😁&#128513;
😂&#128514;
😃&#128515;
😄&#128516;
😅&#128517;