Emoji Sequence Analyzer: Decode ZWJ, Skin Tones, and Keycaps

What Is an EmojiEmoji
Palabra japonesa (絵文字) que significa 'carácter imagen' — pequeños símbolos gráficos usados en la comunicación digital para expresar ideas, emociones y objetos.
Sequence?

Many emojis are not single characters — they are sequences of multiple UnicodeUnicode
Estándar universal de codificación de caracteres que asigna un número único a cada carácter de todos los sistemas de escritura y conjuntos de símbolos, incluidos los emoji.
code points that combine to form one visible glyph. When you paste 👩‍💻 into a text editor, what looks like one emoji is actually three separate code points joined together. Understanding this structure is essential for developers, designers, and anyone curious about how emoji actually work.

The EmojiFYI Sequence Analyzer takes any emoji or emoji sequence and breaks it apart, showing you each component code point, its name, and the type of sequence being used.

Types of Emoji Sequences

ZWJConector de ancho cero (ZWJ)
Carácter Unicode invisible (U+200D) utilizado para unir varios emoji en un único emoji compuesto, como la combinación de personas y objetos en emoji de profesiones.
Sequences

ZWJ stands for Zero Width Joiner (U+200D). It is an invisible character that tells rendering engines to combine the emojis on either side of it into a single glyph.

Example: 👩‍💻 Woman Technologist is composed of: 1. 👩 Woman (U+1F469) 2. U+200D (Zero Width Joiner) 3. 💻 Laptop (U+1F4BB)

The ZWJ signals that these should be fused into a single image. On platforms that support it, you see 👩‍💻. On platforms that do not, you see the three components side by side: 👩💻.

More complex ZWJ sequences chain multiple emojis together:

👨‍👩‍👧‍👦 Family: Man, Woman, Girl, Boy is built from: - 👨 Man + ZWJ + 👩 Woman + ZWJ + 👧 Girl + ZWJ + 👦 Boy

That is seven code points producing one emoji.

Skin Tone Modifier Sequences

The Unicode Standard defines five skin tone modifiers (based on the Fitzpatrick scale):

Modifier Code Point Sample
Light U+1F3FB 👍🏻
Medium-Light U+1F3FC 👍🏼
Medium U+1F3FD 👍🏽
Medium-Dark U+1F3FE 👍🏾
Dark U+1F3FF 👍🏿

When you pick a skin tone for 👍 Thumbs Up, the result is a two-code-point sequence: the base emoji followed immediately by a modifier. The Sequence Analyzer shows both components with their code points.

Some ZWJ sequences combine skin tones on multiple people. 👫🏽 Couple holding hands with medium skin tone uses skin tone modifiers on both figures inside the ZWJ chain.

Keycap Sequences

Keycap emojis like 1️⃣ 2️⃣ #️⃣ *️⃣ are three-code-point sequences:

  1. The base character (a digit, #, or *)
  2. U+FE0F (Variation Selector-16, which signals emoji presentation)
  3. U+20E3 (Combining Enclosing Keycap)

For example, 1️⃣ is: - U+0031 (Digit One: 1) - U+FE0F (Variation Selector-16) - U+20E3 (Combining Enclosing Keycap)

This is why keycap emojis sometimes appear as plain text digits in environments that do not support full emoji rendering — the base character is just the number.

Flag Sequences

Country flag emojis (🇺🇸, 🇯🇵, 🇰🇷) use Regional Indicator Symbols. Each flag is two code points: one for each letter of the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 country code.

🇺🇸 (United States) is: - 🇺 Regional Indicator U (U+1F1FA) - 🇸 Regional Indicator S (U+1F1F8)

The Sequence Analyzer identifies the country code and tells you which country the flag represents.

Subdivision flags (🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 England) use tag sequences — a different, more complex mechanism involving invisible tag characters (U+E0000 range).

How to Use the Sequence Analyzer

Step 1: Open the Tool

Navigate to /tools/sequence-analyzer/.

Step 2: Paste or Type an Emoji

Click the input field and paste an emoji. You can paste a single emoji, a ZWJ sequence, or even a string containing multiple emojis — the analyzer processes each one.

Good sources for complex emoji sequences to analyze: - Copy a family emoji (👨‍👩‍👦) from any messaging app - Copy a profession emoji (🧑‍🚀 Astronaut, 👩‍🎤 Woman Singer) - Copy a couple emoji (💑, 👫) - Type a keycap: 0️⃣ 1️⃣ #️⃣

Step 3: Read the Breakdown

The analyzer displays a table showing:

  • Position — the order of each code point in the sequence
  • Code Point — the hexadecimal Unicode value (e.g., U+1F469)
  • Character — the rendered glyph or description for invisible characters
  • Name — the official Unicode name
  • Type — whether it is a base emoji, ZWJ, modifier, variation selector, or other component

For ZWJ sequences, the tool also names the full sequence (e.g., "Woman Technologist") and links to the emoji detail page.

Step 4: Explore Component Emojis

Clicking any component in the breakdown opens its own emoji detail page. This is useful for understanding which base emojis combine to form a ZWJ sequence, and whether those bases are available as standalone emojis on all platforms.

Practical Uses

For Developers

  • Verify that a string contains exactly the code points you expect before storing it in a database
  • Debug rendering issues where an emoji displays as multiple separate characters
  • Understand why emoji.length in JavaScript returns unexpected values for ZWJ sequences (each code point counts separately in UTF-16UTF-16
    Codificación Unicode de ancho variable que utiliza 2 o 4 bytes por carácter, empleada internamente por JavaScript, Java y Windows.
    )

For Content Creators

  • Confirm that a complex family emoji is a recognized Unicode sequence rather than a platform-specific hack
  • Check which component emojis make up a sequence before using it in a context where rendering support may be limited

For the Curious

  • Discover that 🏳️‍🌈 Rainbow Flag is built from 🏳️ White Flag + ZWJ + 🌈 Rainbow
  • See that 🧑‍🤝‍🧑 People Holding Hands chains together three emojis
  • Understand why 🇨🇳 and 🇹🇼 are just pairs of invisible regional indicator letters

Combining the Analyzer with Other Tools

The Sequence Analyzer works well alongside the Compare tool. After breaking down a ZWJ sequence into its parts, you can check each component in the Compare tool to see how platforms render the base emojis — giving insight into why the combined sequence might look different on Samsung versus Apple.

For a deeper look at ZWJ sequences in general, see the EmojiFYI glossary article on ZWJ Sequences.

Herramientas relacionadas

🔀 Comparar plataformas Comparar plataformas
Compara cómo se muestran los emojis en Apple, Google, Samsung, Microsoft y más. Ve las diferencias visuales en paralelo.
🔍 Analizador de secuencias Analizador de secuencias
Decodifica secuencias ZWJ, modificadores de tono de piel, secuencias de teclas y pares de banderas en sus componentes individuales.

Términos del glosario

Conector de ancho cero (ZWJ) Conector de ancho cero (ZWJ)
Carácter Unicode invisible (U+200D) utilizado para unir varios emoji en un único emoji compuesto, como la combinación de personas y objetos en emoji de profesiones.
Emoji Emoji
Palabra japonesa (絵文字) que significa 'carácter imagen' — pequeños símbolos gráficos usados en la comunicación digital para expresar ideas, emociones y objetos.
Estándar Unicode Estándar Unicode
El sistema completo de codificación de caracteres mantenido por el Consorcio Unicode, que define caracteres, propiedades, algoritmos y formas de codificación.
Indicador regional (RI) Indicador regional (RI)
Letras Unicode emparejadas (U+1F1E6 a U+1F1FF) que forman emoji de banderas de países al combinarse según los códigos ISO 3166-1 alpha-2.
Modificador de tono de piel Modificador de tono de piel
Cinco caracteres modificadores Unicode basados en la escala Fitzpatrick que cambian el color de piel de los emoji humanos (U+1F3FB a U+1F3FF).
Presentación emoji Presentación emoji
Representación predeterminada de un carácter como un glifo emoji a color, ya sea de forma inherente o activada por el Selector de Variación 16.
Punto de código Punto de código
Valor numérico único asignado a cada carácter en el estándar Unicode, escrito en el formato U+XXXX (por ejemplo, U+1F600 para 😀).
Secuencia emoji Secuencia emoji
Conjunto ordenado de uno o más puntos de código Unicode que juntos representan un único carácter emoji.
Selector de variación (VS) Selector de variación (VS)
Caracteres Unicode (VS-15 U+FE0E y VS-16 U+FE0F) que determinan si un carácter se representa en presentación de texto (monocromático) o de emoji (a color).
Unicode Unicode
Estándar universal de codificación de caracteres que asigna un número único a cada carácter de todos los sistemas de escritura y conjuntos de símbolos, incluidos los emoji.
UTF-16 UTF-16
Codificación Unicode de ancho variable que utiliza 2 o 4 bytes por carácter, empleada internamente por JavaScript, Java y Windows.

Artículos relacionados