.gitignore | ||
.npmignore | ||
emojis.json | ||
index.js | ||
LICENSE | ||
package.json | ||
README.md |
hexo-filter-github-emojis
A Hexo plugin that adds emoji support, using Github Emojis API.
Check out the Emoji Cheat Sheet for all the emojis it supports.
Installation
$ npm install hexo-filter-github-emojis --save
Options
You can configure this plugin in _config.yml
. Default options:
githubEmojis:
enable: true
className: github-emoji
unicode: false
localEmojis:
The filter will try to download the latest version of Github Emojis list. If the network is unavailable or too slow it will use the backup version.
-
className - Image class name. For
:sparkles:
the filter will generate something like this:<img class="github-emoji" title=":sparkles:" alt=":sparkles:" src="https://assets-cdn.github.com/images/icons/emoji/unicode/2728.png" height="20" width="20">
-
unicode - If you set this option to true, the filter will generate something like this:
<span class="github-emoji" title=":sparkles:" data-src="https://assets-cdn.github.com/images/icons/emoji/unicode/2728.png">✨</span>
Then you can fallback to image with JavaScript. For example, with jQuery:
$('span.github-emoji').each(function (i, emoji) { var $emoji = $(emoji) var codepoint = $emoji.html() $('<img height="20" width="20">') .on('error', function () { // image loading failed $emoji.html(codepoint) }) .prop('alt', $emoji.attr('title')) .prop('src', $emoji.data('src')) .appendTo($emoji.empty()) })
-
localEmojis - You can specify your own list. An object or JSON string is valid. The filter will first check the
localEmojis
then fallback to the Github Emojis list.For example:
githubEmojis: localEmojis: arrow_left: https://path/to/arrow_left.png arrow_right: https://path/to/arrow_right.png
If you need to add code points that are not in the Github list, you can do this:
githubEmojis: localEmojis: man_juggling: src: https://path/to/man_juggling.png codepoints: ["1f939", "2642"] arrow_right: https://path/to/arrow_right.png
Helper
You can also render a GitHub emoji from a template using the github_emoji
helper:
<h1><% github_emoji('octocat') %></h1>