Package Exports
- emoji-picker-react
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Readme
React Emoji Picker
npm i emoji-picker-react --save
An easy to use React Emoji Picker Module. For easy integration with your app, you should consider using the companion package: React Text field components with emoji picker.
Usage:
import React, {Component} from 'react';
import EmojiPicker from 'emoji-picker-react';
class MyComponent extends Component {
render() {
return (
<EmojiPicker onEmojiClick={myCallback}/>
);
}
}
Customization
Modifying the picker's height and width
By default the picker is 240px wide and ~315px tall (depending on the position of the categories panel). To change the width and height of the picker, simply:
<EmojiPicker width="315" height="280"/>
<EmojiPicker height="280"/> // width will default to 240
<EmojiPicker width="315"/> // height will default to 240
A word on height: The height you determine by the height property, is of the emoji-list only, the search and categories panel are added to the height you specify.
Moving the categories panel around
<EmojiPicker nav="top"/> // default. no need to pass nav="top"
<EmojiPicker nav="left"/>
<EmojiPicker nav="bottom"/>
Getting the clicked-on emoji
In order to use the picker in your application, you need a way to grab the name and code of the clicked-on emoji. To do this, you just need to pass the onEmojiClick
prop. It should be a callback function to your application, and it should get two arguments: the emoji code, and the rest of the emoji data.
Clicking on an emoji should result in a similar output:
["261d-1f3ff", Object]
0: "261d-1f3ff"
▶1: Object
shortname: "point_up"
category: "people"
order: 206
▶diversities: Array[5]
0: "261d-1f3fb"
1: "261d-1f3fc"
2: "261d-1f3fd"
3: "261d-1f3fe"
4: "261d-1f3ff"
Integrating with your app
So, you got the emoji the user clicked on, what do you do next?
I have found that the easiest way to convert the emojis into images on my site, or as unicode characters, is by using iamcal/js-emoji. This guy wrote an amazing library that allows you to take the emoji name (needed to be wrapped in colons, like that: 😂
), and convert them into whatever you like. This is what I use for the live-demo demonstration. It should be as simple as:
import JSEMOJI from 'emoji-js';
// you can import it with a script tag instead
// new instance
jsemoji = new JSEMOJI();
// set the style to emojione (default - apple)
jsemoji.img_set = 'emojione';
// set the storage location for all emojis
jsemoji.img_sets.emojione.path = 'https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/emojione/assets/3.0/png/32/';
// some more settings...
jsemoji.supports_css = false;
jsemoji.allow_native = false;
jsemoji.replace_mode = 'unified';
and then, in your onEmojiClick callback:
jsemoji.replace_colons(`:${emojiName}:`);
Image hosting
CDN
All Emoji files are hosted on jsdeliver, and by default, the picker is configured to use it as the image source, with emojis of size 32x32px. You may also choose to serve 64x64px or 128x128px emojis, using the emojiResolution
prop.
<EmojiPicker emojiResolution="64"/>
For more info on the hosted emojis: http://www.jsdelivr.com/projects/emojione
Self hosting of emojis
You could also serve the emojis from your own server or CDN using the assetPath
prop. You will then need to serve all emojis from a directory named after the desired image resolution. To specify resolution other than 32
, you will need to pass an additional prop - emojiResolution
.
If you want to serve 64px emojis from your own website, it will need to look somewhat like this:
<EmojiPicker assetPath="http://example.com/emojis" emojiResolution="64"/>
The picker will internally construct the image urls to appear like this:
http://example.com/emojis/64/1f448-1f3fd.png
(1f448-1f3fd.png
is an emoji filename + extension)
Cool stuff
Per Emoji diversity picker
Long clicking on diversity (skin-tone) enabled Emojies (mostly the hand Emojis), will open a list of all skin tones for this Emoji.
Attributions
You can use this picker, free of charge, no attribution is needed. The emojis have their own license.
All emoji images in this project are the property of the Emojione. Usage of the images is subjeced to their free license.
Other shout-outs:
- iamcal/emoji-data An amazing project, containing emoji data. All the info (names, keywords, etc) in this picker is generated from their data.
- throttle-debounce npm package, used multiple times in the project.
- iconmonstr used for the category icons.
- React Storybook, made building the live demo fast and simple.