The Open Type font format standard 1.7 officially supports three types of colored glyphs, as required for emojis. As of late 2016, version 1.8 has added support for another variant. Platform support varies:
- Microsoft’s/Mozilla’s
COLR
/CPAL
tables use standard Truetypeglyf
or PostscriptCFF
outlines. - Mozilla’s/Adobe’s/W3C’s
SVG
table uses SVG outlines and CSS Variables. - Google’s
CBDT
/CBLC
tables use embedded PNG bitmaps. - Apple’s
sbix
table uses embedded PNG, JPEG or TIFF bitmaps (and PDFs outside the standard). Support for masks and aliases is planned.
The SVG
table explicitly considers animation – using CSS, JS, SMIL or embedded files – but I’m not sure that has been implemented anywhere yet:
Glyph Rendering
The SVG glyph descriptions may be rendered statically or with animation enabled.
Does any of the PNG-based implementations support animation using APNG? How about tools?
Compressed Color Bitmaps
Images for each individual glyph are stored as straight PNG data. Only the following chunks are allowed in such PNG data:
IHDR
,PLTE
,tRNS
,sRGB
,IDAT
, andIEND
. If other chunks are present, the behavior is undefined.
JFTR, APNG relies on three additional chunks which both OS X / macOS and iOS natively support:
acTL
Animation ControlfcTL
Frame ControlfdAT
Frame Data
So, if I’m not mistaken, APNGs should work in sbix
verbatim, but not in CBDT
.