About the emoji-translate category

emoji-translate:
[ This description is mirrored from README.md at github.com/notwaldorf/emoji-translate on 2019-05-10 ]

emoji-translate

You know how sometimes you type English and it has all these letters and words and no emoji? Yeah, emoji-translate fixes that.

Packaged demos

omg emoji

This is what you actually want, right? Can’t blame you. Here you go. �

There’s also a Chrome extension that lets you translate any page on the internet to emoji. Your nightmares are finally over.

Emoji-translate as a library

You can also use this as a standalone library for your own translation purposes.

Install

bower install emoji-translate

Usage

When emoji-translate.js is loaded, it will load json of emoji names and keywords, save it in a global called allEmojis, and fire an emoji-ready event. allEmojis has this structure:

{
  "grinning": {
    "keywords": ["face", "smile", "happy", "joy"],
    "char": "�",
    "category": "people"
  },
  "grin": {
    "keywords": ["face", "happy", "smile", "joy"],
    "char": "�",
    "category": "people"
  },
  ...
}

The emoji-translate api has 2 methods:

  • getMeAnEmoji(word) – returns the emoji translation of the english word, or the empty string if one doesn’t exist.
  • translateWord(word) – returns a <span> element that contains either the
    original english word, or the emoji translation, ready for display.

:heart:

This was made as part of an :zap:emoji hackday​:zap: and is powered by emojilib, a magical json file of emoji names and keywords y’all should use in all your projects.