Does anyone know how Facebook encodes emoji with high-surrogate pairs in the Graph API?
Low surrogate pairs seem fine. For example, ❤️ (HEAVY BLACK HEART, though it is red in iOS/OSX, link to image if you can't see the emoji) comes through as \u2764\ufe0f
which appears to match the UTF-16 hex codes / "Formal Unicode Notation" shown here at iemoji.com.
And indeed, in Ruby when parsing the JSON output from the API:
ActiveSupport::JSON.decode('"\u2764\ufe0f"')
you correctly get:
"❤️"
However, to pick another emoji, 💤 (SLEEPING SYMBOL, link to image here. Facebook returns \udbba\udf59
. This seems to correspond with nothing I can find on any unicode resources, e.g., for example this one at iemoji.com.
And when I attempt to decode in Ruby using the same method above:
ActiveSupport::JSON.decode('"\udbba\udf59"')
I get:
""
Any idea what's going on here?
\u2764\ufe0f
isn't a surrogate pair, it's a normal Basic Multilingual Plane character followed by a variation selector. Using a variant to try to distinguish when emoji should be rendered as colour icons is an ugly new addition in Unicode 6.2.\udbba\udf59
does seem to be an error though... the corresponding codepoint U+FEB59 is Private Use character that you shouldn't be getting.U+2764
works. But one that looks likeU+1F4A4
(note the 1) does not.