Accurately find or remove emojis from a blob of text using data from the Unicode Consortium's emoji code repository.
Version 1.x of demoji
now bundles Unicode data in the package at install time rather than requiring
a download of the codes from unicode.org at runtime. Please see the CHANGELOG.md
for detail and be familiar with the changes before updating from 0.x to 1.x.
To report any regressions, please open a GitHub issue.
demoji
exports several text-related functions for find-and-replace functionality with emojis:
>>> tweet = """\
... #startspreadingthenews yankees win great start by 🎅🏾 going 5strong innings with 5k’s🔥 🐂
... solo homerun 🌋🌋 with 2 solo homeruns and👹 3run homerun… 🤡 🚣🏼 👨🏽⚖️ with rbi’s … 🔥🔥
... 🇲🇽 and 🇳🇮 to close the game🔥🔥!!!….
... WHAT A GAME!!..
... """
>>> demoji.findall(tweet)
{
"🔥": "fire",
"🌋": "volcano",
"👨🏽\u200d⚖️": "man judge: medium skin tone",
"🎅🏾": "Santa Claus: medium-dark skin tone",
"🇲🇽": "flag: Mexico",
"👹": "ogre",
"🤡": "clown face",
"🇳🇮": "flag: Nicaragua",
"🚣🏼": "person rowing boat: medium-light skin tone",
"🐂": "ox",
}
See below for function API.
You can use demoji
or python -m demoji
to replace emojis
in file(s) or stdin with their :code:
equivalents:
$ cat out.txt
All done! ✨ 🍰 ✨
$ demoji out.txt
All done! :sparkles: :shortcake: :sparkles:
$ echo 'All done! ✨ 🍰 ✨' | demoji
All done! :sparkles: :shortcake: :sparkles:
$ demoji -
we didnt start the 🔥
we didnt start the :fire:
findall(string: str) -> Dict[str, str]
Find emojis within string
. Return a mapping of {emoji: description}
.
findall_list(string: str, desc: bool = True) -> List[str]
Find emojis within string
. Return a list (with possible duplicates).
If desc
is True, the list contains description codes. If desc
is False, the list contains emojis.
replace(string: str, repl: str = "") -> str
Replace emojis in string
with repl
.
replace_with_desc(string: str, sep: str = ":") -> str
Replace emojis in string
with their description codes. The codes are surrounded by sep
.
last_downloaded_timestamp() -> datetime.datetime
Show the timestamp of last download for the emoji data bundled with the package.
Numerous emojis that look like single Unicode characters are actually multi-character sequences. Examples:
- The keycap 2️⃣ is actually 3 characters, U+0032 (the ASCII digit 2), U+FE0F (variation selector), and U+20E3 (combining enclosing keycap).
- The flag of Scotland 7 component characters,
b'\\U0001f3f4\\U000e0067\\U000e0062\\U000e0073\\U000e0063\\U000e0074\\U000e007f'
in full esaped notation.
(You can see any of these through s.encode("unicode-escape")
.)
demoji
is careful to handle this and should find the full sequences rather than their incomplete subcomponents.
The way it does this it to sort emoji codes by their length, and then compile a concatenated regular expression that will greedily search for longer emojis first, falling back to shorter ones if not found. This is not by any means a super-optimized way of searching as it has O(N2) properties, but the focus is on accuracy and completeness.
>>> from pprint import pprint
>>> seq = """\
... I bet you didn't know that 🙋, 🙋♂️, and 🙋♀️ are three different emojis.
... """
>>> pprint(seq.encode('unicode-escape')) # Python 3
(b"I bet you didn't know that \\U0001f64b, \\U0001f64b\\u200d\\u2642\\ufe0f,"
b' and \\U0001f64b\\u200d\\u2640\\ufe0f are three different emojis.\\n')