Unicode Emoji Properties: Extended_Pictographic, Emoji_Presentation, and More

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

Unicode assigns named properties to every code point, and emoji have a dedicated set defined in Unicode Standard Annex #51. These properties are the authoritative source for deciding whether a character is an emoji, how it should be displayed, and how it interacts with other characters.

Understanding these properties is essential for building correct emoji parsers, validators, and renderers.

The Six Core Emoji Properties

1. Emoji

The broadest property. A code point has Emoji=Yes if it can be used as an emoji. This includes characters that are also used as ordinary text symbols.

U+0023  # NUMBER SIGN          Emoji=Yes (part of # keycap)
U+00A9  © COPYRIGHT SIGN       Emoji=Yes
U+1F600 😀 GRINNING FACE       Emoji=Yes

About 1,400+ code points have Emoji=Yes. The Emoji property alone is too broad for most detection tasks because it includes digits, common punctuation, and symbols that usually appear as plain text.

2. Emoji_Presentation

A code point has Emoji_Presentation=Yes if it is displayed as a color emoji by default — without requiring a variation selector. This is the property most commonly used to answer "is this character normally shown as an emoji?"

U+1F600 😀  Emoji_Presentation=Yes  (emoji by default)
U+0023  #   Emoji_Presentation=No   (text by default, needs U+FE0F for emoji)
U+00A9  ©   Emoji_Presentation=No   (text by default)

Approximately 1,200 code points have Emoji_Presentation=Yes.

3. Emoji_Modifier

Marks the five skin tone modifier characters (Fitzpatrick scale):

Code Point Character Tone
U+1F3FB 🏻 Light
U+1F3FC 🏼 Medium-Light
U+1F3FD 🏽 Medium
U+1F3FE 🏾 Medium-Dark
U+1F3FF 🏿 Dark

These characters have no standalone appearance; they only make sense immediately following an Emoji_Modifier_Base character.

4. Emoji_Modifier_Base

A code point has Emoji_Modifier_Base=Yes if it can be followed by a skin tone modifier to create a modified sequence. Examples include 👋 (waving hand), 🖐 (hand with fingers splayed), and 🧑 (person).

# Checking modifier base + modifier sequence
base = "\U0001F44B"    # 👋
modifier = "\U0001F3FD"  # 🏽 Medium skin tone
combined = base + modifier
print(combined)  # 👋🏽

Not all person-like emoji are modifier bases. 👻 (ghost) and 🤖 (robot) are not modifier bases because they are not human-like enough.

5. Emoji_Component

A code point that can appear as part of an emoji sequence but is not itself an emoji when standalone. This includes:

  • Skin tone modifiers (U+1F3FB–U+1F3FF)
  • 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.
    (U+200D)
  • Variation selectors (U+FE0E, U+FE0F)
  • Combining Enclosing Keycap (U+20E3)
  • Tag characters (U+E0020–U+E007F) used in subdivision flags
  • Regional Indicator letters (U+1F1E0–U+1F1FF)

Emoji_Component=Yes does not imply the character is itself an emoji — ZWJ is a joining control character, not an emoji.

6. Extended_Pictographic

The most useful property for comprehensive emoji detection. It covers:

  • All code points with Emoji_Presentation=Yes
  • Reserved code points in emoji blocks (for future emoji)
  • Additional pictographic symbols
Extended_Pictographic ⊃ Emoji_Presentation

Using Extended_Pictographic in a regex ensures your code will not break when new emoji are added to existing Unicode blocks, because those blocks are already reserved.

Accessing Property Data

From the Unicode Character Database

The official source is emoji-data.txt in the Unicode UCD:

# Download the latest data file
curl -O https://unicode.org/Public/UCD/latest/ucd/emoji/emoji-data.txt

# View Extended_Pictographic ranges
grep "Extended_Pictographic" emoji-data.txt | head -20

Sample output:

00A9          ; Emoji                # 1.1  [1] (©️)
00AE          ; Emoji                # 1.1  [1] (®️)
203C          ; Emoji                # 1.1  [1] (‼️)
...
1F600         ; Emoji                # 6.1  [1] (😀)
1F600         ; Emoji_Presentation   # 6.1  [1] (😀)
...
1F3FB..1F3FF  ; Emoji_Modifier       # 8.0  [5] (🏻..🏿)

Using Python's unicodedata Module

The standard library only exposes a subset of properties. For emoji properties, use the unicodedata2 or regex module:

import regex

def get_emoji_properties(char: str) -> dict:
    """Return relevant Unicode emoji properties for a character."""
    cp = ord(char)
    return {
        "code_point": f"U+{cp:04X}",
        "character": char,
        "is_emoji": bool(regex.match(r'\p{Emoji}', char)),
        "is_emoji_presentation": bool(regex.match(r'\p{Emoji_Presentation}', char)),
        "is_emoji_modifier": bool(regex.match(r'\p{Emoji_Modifier}', char)),
        "is_emoji_modifier_base": bool(regex.match(r'\p{Emoji_Modifier_Base}', char)),
        "is_emoji_component": bool(regex.match(r'\p{Emoji_Component}', char)),
        "is_extended_pictographic": bool(regex.match(r'\p{Extended_Pictographic}', char)),
    }

print(get_emoji_properties("👋"))
# {
#   'code_point': 'U+1F44B',
#   'character': '👋',
#   'is_emoji': True,
#   'is_emoji_presentation': True,
#   'is_emoji_modifier': False,
#   'is_emoji_modifier_base': True,
#   'is_emoji_component': False,
#   'is_extended_pictographic': True
# }

print(get_emoji_properties("🏽"))
# {
#   'code_point': 'U+1F3FD',
#   'is_emoji': True,
#   'is_emoji_modifier': True,
#   'is_emoji_component': True,
#   ...
# }

JavaScript with Unicode Property Escapes

ES2018 introduced \p{} escapes in regex (requires the u flag):

const tests = {
  emoji: /^\p{Emoji}$/u,
  emojiPresentation: /^\p{Emoji_Presentation}$/u,
  emojiModifier: /^\p{Emoji_Modifier}$/u,
  emojiModifierBase: /^\p{Emoji_Modifier_Base}$/u,
  emojiComponent: /^\p{Emoji_Component}$/u,
  extendedPictographic: /^\p{Extended_Pictographic}$/u,
};

function getProperties(char) {
  return Object.fromEntries(
    Object.entries(tests).map(([k, rx]) => [k, rx.test(char)])
  );
}

console.log(getProperties('🤝'));
// { emoji: true, emojiPresentation: true, emojiModifierBase: true,
//   emojiComponent: false, extendedPictographic: true, ... }

// Note: Emoji_Modifier_Base is NOT a standard \p{} escape in all engines
// Use a library for full coverage

Browser support for \p{Extended_Pictographic} is available in Chrome 64+, Firefox 78+, Safari 11.1+.

Practical Decision Guide

Use case Property to use
"Is this character typically shown as emoji?" Emoji_Presentation
"Should I include reserved future emoji ranges?" Extended_Pictographic
"Is this a skin tone modifier?" Emoji_Modifier
"Can I apply a skin tone to this?" Emoji_Modifier_Base
"Is this character part of a multi-code-point sequence?" Emoji_Component
"Is this character in the Unicode emoji set at all?" Emoji

Property Relationships

The properties form a hierarchy:

Extended_Pictographic
  ├── Emoji_Presentation  (subset of Extended_Pictographic)
  │     └── most "real" emoji
  └── Emoji               (broader, includes text-default symbols)
        ├── Emoji_Modifier_Base  (subset of Emoji)
        └── Emoji_Modifier       (subset of Emoji_Component)

Emoji_Component is orthogonal — ZWJ has Emoji_Component=Yes but Emoji=No.

Validating Emoji Sequences

Valid emoji sequences are defined in emoji-sequences.txt and emoji-zwj-sequences.txt in the UCD. A code point having Emoji=Yes does not mean any combination of emoji code points is valid:

import regex

# A minimal valid sequence checker
VALID_EMOJI = regex.compile(
    r'\p{Extended_Pictographic}\p{Emoji_Modifier}?'     # base + optional modifier
    r'(?:\uFE0F(?:\u20E3)?)?'                            # optional VS16 + keycap
    r'(?:\u200D\p{Extended_Pictographic}\p{Emoji_Modifier}?(?:\uFE0F)?)*'  # ZWJ chain
    r'|[\U0001F1E0-\U0001F1FF]{2}'                       # flag pair
)

for seq in ["👋🏽", "👨‍💻", "🇺🇸", "🏻👋"]:  # last one is invalid order
    match = VALID_EMOJI.fullmatch(seq)
    print(f"{seq}: {'valid' if match else 'invalid'}")

Explore More on EmojiFYI

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.
Emoji a color Emoji a color
Emoji en color completo renderizados mediante imágenes de mapa de bits o gráficos vectoriales a color, en contraposición al renderizado monocromático tipo texto.
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).
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.

Artículos relacionados