Emoji Polyfill

This makes the browser support emoji by using native fonts if possible and a fallback if not.

Auteur
James Edward Lewis II
Nombre d'installations quotidiennes
0
Nombre d'installations
417
Évaluations
4 0 0
Version
1.0.28
Créer
2015-03-15
Mis à jour
2016-07-18
Licence
MIT
S'applique à
Tous les sites

As the URL to the source code makes clear, this is ultimately derived from the Chromoji extension for Google Chrome, although it is now very different: https://github.com/lewisje/Chromoji/tree/userscript

In case you would prefer to install the extension, it is now on the Chrome Web Store: https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/emoji-polyfill/kaplhmhahkanhjahbdbaamdaililfmkj

In case you would prefer a bookmarklet, here it is: javascript:(function(d){'use strict';var ss=['//greasyfork.org/scripts/8598-emoji-polyfill/code/Emoji Polyfill.user.js'],body=d.body||d.getElementsByTagName('body')[0]||d.getElementsByTagName('frameset')[0],s,i;for(i=ss.length;i--;){s=d.createElement('script');s.src=ss[i];d.body.appendChild(s);}})(document);

After experimenting with stripping out the functionality of Chromoji to solely support textual emoji, I discovered that I needed none of the power of a Chrome extension to do it, and I ended up stripping out almost all of the code; after that, to make it into a UserScript, I only needed to inject the tiny stylesheet included with the extension, and also pack in a few polyfills for browsers other than Chrome.

I ended up hosting the fonts and linking to them externally, so that I could potentially support IE8 (which does not support data: URIs in webfonts) and Opera 9 (which only supports SVG webfonts, which were all too big for data: URIs, even after subsetting).