![]() ![]() ![]() The folder name would simply be displayed incorrectly, as mojibake. Generally speaking, the only issues you’d potentially run into are if you tried to view these filenames using an operating system that doesn’t correctly supports Unicode, such as early versions of Windows XP.īut even then, you’d still be able to access the files. In UTF-16 representation, the above would be \ud83c\udf4d\ud83c\udf3a\ud83c\udf8b\ud83c\udf55\ud83c\udf2d.īasically every modern (or modern-ish) filesystem in use today - APFS, HFSJ+, ext4/ext3/ext2, ZFS, NTFS, exFAT, and even FAT32/FAT16/FAT12 (thanks to Microsoft’s backwards-compatible “Long Filename” feature) supports storing and retrieving unicode characters as filenames or directory names.In UTF-8 representation, the above would be \圆1\圆9\x75\圆5\圆f.In UTF-16 representation, the above would be \u3042\u3044\u3046\u3048\u304a.Īiueo (same thing as above, but now with Latin characters).あいうえお (a i u e o, the 5 vowels written in Japanese hiragana script) Which is basically text.īasically, what this means is that emoji are actually encoded and handled in the same way that say, a Japanese character would be. What I mean is that they’re Unicode codepoints. This may seem very counterintuitive, but emoji are actually text. ![]()
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