Question
My question, explained below, is:
How can R be used to read a string that includes HTML emoji codes like ��
?
I'd like to:
(1) represent the emoji symbol (e.g., as a unicode symbol: 🤗
) in the parsed string, OR
(2) convert it into its text equivalent (":hugging face:
")
Background
I have an XML dataset of text messages (from the Android/iOS app Signal) that I am reading into R for a text mining project. The data look like this, with each text message represented in an sms
node:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes" ?>
<!-- File Created By Signal -->
<smses count="1">
<sms protocol="0" address="+15555555555" contact_name="Jane Doe" date="1483256850399" readable_date="Sat, 31 Dec 2016 23:47:30 PST" type="1" subject="null" body="Hug emoji: ��" toa="null" sc_toa="null" service_center="null" read="1" status="-1" locked="0" />
</smses>
Problem
I am currently reading the data using the xml2
package for R. When I use the xml2::read_xml
function, however, I get the following error message:
Error in doc_parse_raw(x, encoding = encoding, base_url = base_url, as_html = as_html, :
xmlParseCharRef: invalid xmlChar value 55358
Which, as I understand, indicates that the emoji character is not recognized as valid XML.
Using the xml2::read_html
function does work, but drops the emoji character. A small example of this is here:
example_text <- "Hugging emoji: ��"
xml2::xml_text(xml2::read_html(paste0("<x>", example_text, "</x>")))
(Output: [1] "Hugging emoji: "
)
This character is valid HTML -- Googling ��
actually converts it in the search bar to the "hugging face" emoji, and brings up results relating to that emoji.
Other information I've found that seems relevant to this question
I've been searching Stack Overflow, and have not found any questions relating to this particular issue. I've also not been able to find a table that straightforwardly gives HTML codes next to the emoji they represent, and so am not able to do an (albeit inefficient) conversion of these HTML codes to their textual equivalents in a big loop before parsing the dataset; for example, neither this list nor its underlying dataset seem to include the string 55358
.