Monday, November 28, 2016

113 New Unicode Emoji (plus skin tones)

rockstar-emoji-image
113 new emoji are now available in UTR #51 Unicode Emoji, Version 4.0. The main focus of this 4.0 release is further enhancing gender representation and professions. These new emoji are already appearing on smart phones and other devices and platforms that support emoji. See the full list in Emoji Recently Added.

The new emoji will soon be available for adoption, helping fund projects to improve language support.

Unlike the 72 emoji characters added to Unicode 9.0 in June, these are not new Unicode characters. Most of these new emoji are sequences of existing emoji, “glued together” with a special invisible character so that they appear and behave like a single character. This glue character is called a ZWJ, pronounced “zwidge” or /zwɪdʒ/. Three existing Unicode 9.0 characters (gender and medical symbols) were changed to qualify as emoji, for use in those ZWJ sequences.

Two of the new sequences are flags, 10 are family groupings (such as mother with daughter), 32 are new professions/roles (such as man or woman astronaut), and 66 are explicit-gendered variants (such as man or woman running). 99 of these sequences, plus 5 other characters (such as snowboarder), can also now have the 5 skin tone modifiers.

The technical documentation has also been updated, with additional guidelines for implementers and the new versions of the emoji data files for use in programs.

Wednesday, November 16, 2016

Proposed Update UTS #37, Unicode Ideographic Variation Database

The Unicode Consortium has posted a new issue for public review and comment.

UTS #37, Unicode Ideographic Variation Database, is being updated to broaden the scope of base character, from characters with the Unified_Ideograph property to characters with the Ideographic property, excluding characters that canonically or compatibly decompose. The substantive changes can be found in Section 2, Description. This proposed update is currently under review with a closing date of 2017-01-16. For more information, please see Public Review Issue #337.