Does Ubuntu 18.04 show filenames containing emojis in colour?
I've recently transferred some files made on Mac OS, and containing emojis in their filename, to my Ubuntu 16.04 LTS machine.
The emojis show up in Nautilus, albeit monochromatic. Will I see them in full color if I switch to 18.04 LTS?
18.04 nautilus emoji
add a comment |
I've recently transferred some files made on Mac OS, and containing emojis in their filename, to my Ubuntu 16.04 LTS machine.
The emojis show up in Nautilus, albeit monochromatic. Will I see them in full color if I switch to 18.04 LTS?
18.04 nautilus emoji
1
Related: How does Ubuntu 18.04 “support emojis”?
– pomsky
Dec 18 '18 at 15:03
@Fabby The two questions are duplicates of each other, but this question should be left open and the direction of the duplication should be reversed so that the other question is a duplicate of this one.
– karel
Jan 4 at 12:32
@karel: the other question is older and that is the direction we normally take.. Close vote retracted while you take time responding.. ;-)
– Fabby
Jan 4 at 13:56
1
I chose the direction with the better answers regardless of who posted first. In this case there was some doubt, so I tested the answers before voting. I don't want Ask Ubuntu users to be frustrated like I often am at Stack Overflow where I test ten answers and none of them work, so I have to stop wasting time and debug my own malfunctioning code.
– karel
Jan 4 at 14:51
add a comment |
I've recently transferred some files made on Mac OS, and containing emojis in their filename, to my Ubuntu 16.04 LTS machine.
The emojis show up in Nautilus, albeit monochromatic. Will I see them in full color if I switch to 18.04 LTS?
18.04 nautilus emoji
I've recently transferred some files made on Mac OS, and containing emojis in their filename, to my Ubuntu 16.04 LTS machine.
The emojis show up in Nautilus, albeit monochromatic. Will I see them in full color if I switch to 18.04 LTS?
18.04 nautilus emoji
18.04 nautilus emoji
edited Dec 18 '18 at 3:44
muru
1
1
asked Dec 18 '18 at 3:23
Lo ScrondoLo Scrondo
556
556
1
Related: How does Ubuntu 18.04 “support emojis”?
– pomsky
Dec 18 '18 at 15:03
@Fabby The two questions are duplicates of each other, but this question should be left open and the direction of the duplication should be reversed so that the other question is a duplicate of this one.
– karel
Jan 4 at 12:32
@karel: the other question is older and that is the direction we normally take.. Close vote retracted while you take time responding.. ;-)
– Fabby
Jan 4 at 13:56
1
I chose the direction with the better answers regardless of who posted first. In this case there was some doubt, so I tested the answers before voting. I don't want Ask Ubuntu users to be frustrated like I often am at Stack Overflow where I test ten answers and none of them work, so I have to stop wasting time and debug my own malfunctioning code.
– karel
Jan 4 at 14:51
add a comment |
1
Related: How does Ubuntu 18.04 “support emojis”?
– pomsky
Dec 18 '18 at 15:03
@Fabby The two questions are duplicates of each other, but this question should be left open and the direction of the duplication should be reversed so that the other question is a duplicate of this one.
– karel
Jan 4 at 12:32
@karel: the other question is older and that is the direction we normally take.. Close vote retracted while you take time responding.. ;-)
– Fabby
Jan 4 at 13:56
1
I chose the direction with the better answers regardless of who posted first. In this case there was some doubt, so I tested the answers before voting. I don't want Ask Ubuntu users to be frustrated like I often am at Stack Overflow where I test ten answers and none of them work, so I have to stop wasting time and debug my own malfunctioning code.
– karel
Jan 4 at 14:51
1
1
Related: How does Ubuntu 18.04 “support emojis”?
– pomsky
Dec 18 '18 at 15:03
Related: How does Ubuntu 18.04 “support emojis”?
– pomsky
Dec 18 '18 at 15:03
@Fabby The two questions are duplicates of each other, but this question should be left open and the direction of the duplication should be reversed so that the other question is a duplicate of this one.
– karel
Jan 4 at 12:32
@Fabby The two questions are duplicates of each other, but this question should be left open and the direction of the duplication should be reversed so that the other question is a duplicate of this one.
– karel
Jan 4 at 12:32
@karel: the other question is older and that is the direction we normally take.. Close vote retracted while you take time responding.. ;-)
– Fabby
Jan 4 at 13:56
@karel: the other question is older and that is the direction we normally take.. Close vote retracted while you take time responding.. ;-)
– Fabby
Jan 4 at 13:56
1
1
I chose the direction with the better answers regardless of who posted first. In this case there was some doubt, so I tested the answers before voting. I don't want Ask Ubuntu users to be frustrated like I often am at Stack Overflow where I test ten answers and none of them work, so I have to stop wasting time and debug my own malfunctioning code.
– karel
Jan 4 at 14:51
I chose the direction with the better answers regardless of who posted first. In this case there was some doubt, so I tested the answers before voting. I don't want Ask Ubuntu users to be frustrated like I often am at Stack Overflow where I test ten answers and none of them work, so I have to stop wasting time and debug my own malfunctioning code.
– karel
Jan 4 at 14:51
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
I tested this out in a VM, and it seems you can get colour emojis in 18.04:
16.04:
18.04:
The filenames were created over ssh from macOS using touch 🍺😅
; the emojis entered using the macOS emoji picker.
add a comment |
Yes, 18.04 supports colour emoji by default.
The Ubuntu desktop now ships with a full set of color emoji. Previously, emoji support was inconsistent and emojis appeared as black-and-white in some applications.
Source: What’s New in Ubuntu 18.04 LTS “Bionic Beaver” - How to Geek
add a comment |
Just for the sake of completeness, I've made today a 18.04 LTS clean install: the emojis that looked monochromatic on 16.04 now look fully coloured. There are just some minor differences between the Apple and SVG emojis sets.
add a comment |
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3 Answers
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active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
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votes
I tested this out in a VM, and it seems you can get colour emojis in 18.04:
16.04:
18.04:
The filenames were created over ssh from macOS using touch 🍺😅
; the emojis entered using the macOS emoji picker.
add a comment |
I tested this out in a VM, and it seems you can get colour emojis in 18.04:
16.04:
18.04:
The filenames were created over ssh from macOS using touch 🍺😅
; the emojis entered using the macOS emoji picker.
add a comment |
I tested this out in a VM, and it seems you can get colour emojis in 18.04:
16.04:
18.04:
The filenames were created over ssh from macOS using touch 🍺😅
; the emojis entered using the macOS emoji picker.
I tested this out in a VM, and it seems you can get colour emojis in 18.04:
16.04:
18.04:
The filenames were created over ssh from macOS using touch 🍺😅
; the emojis entered using the macOS emoji picker.
answered Dec 18 '18 at 3:33
murumuru
1
1
add a comment |
add a comment |
Yes, 18.04 supports colour emoji by default.
The Ubuntu desktop now ships with a full set of color emoji. Previously, emoji support was inconsistent and emojis appeared as black-and-white in some applications.
Source: What’s New in Ubuntu 18.04 LTS “Bionic Beaver” - How to Geek
add a comment |
Yes, 18.04 supports colour emoji by default.
The Ubuntu desktop now ships with a full set of color emoji. Previously, emoji support was inconsistent and emojis appeared as black-and-white in some applications.
Source: What’s New in Ubuntu 18.04 LTS “Bionic Beaver” - How to Geek
add a comment |
Yes, 18.04 supports colour emoji by default.
The Ubuntu desktop now ships with a full set of color emoji. Previously, emoji support was inconsistent and emojis appeared as black-and-white in some applications.
Source: What’s New in Ubuntu 18.04 LTS “Bionic Beaver” - How to Geek
Yes, 18.04 supports colour emoji by default.
The Ubuntu desktop now ships with a full set of color emoji. Previously, emoji support was inconsistent and emojis appeared as black-and-white in some applications.
Source: What’s New in Ubuntu 18.04 LTS “Bionic Beaver” - How to Geek
answered Dec 18 '18 at 3:35
wjandreawjandrea
8,51142260
8,51142260
add a comment |
add a comment |
Just for the sake of completeness, I've made today a 18.04 LTS clean install: the emojis that looked monochromatic on 16.04 now look fully coloured. There are just some minor differences between the Apple and SVG emojis sets.
add a comment |
Just for the sake of completeness, I've made today a 18.04 LTS clean install: the emojis that looked monochromatic on 16.04 now look fully coloured. There are just some minor differences between the Apple and SVG emojis sets.
add a comment |
Just for the sake of completeness, I've made today a 18.04 LTS clean install: the emojis that looked monochromatic on 16.04 now look fully coloured. There are just some minor differences between the Apple and SVG emojis sets.
Just for the sake of completeness, I've made today a 18.04 LTS clean install: the emojis that looked monochromatic on 16.04 now look fully coloured. There are just some minor differences between the Apple and SVG emojis sets.
answered Dec 18 '18 at 19:14
Lo ScrondoLo Scrondo
556
556
add a comment |
add a comment |
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1
Related: How does Ubuntu 18.04 “support emojis”?
– pomsky
Dec 18 '18 at 15:03
@Fabby The two questions are duplicates of each other, but this question should be left open and the direction of the duplication should be reversed so that the other question is a duplicate of this one.
– karel
Jan 4 at 12:32
@karel: the other question is older and that is the direction we normally take.. Close vote retracted while you take time responding.. ;-)
– Fabby
Jan 4 at 13:56
1
I chose the direction with the better answers regardless of who posted first. In this case there was some doubt, so I tested the answers before voting. I don't want Ask Ubuntu users to be frustrated like I often am at Stack Overflow where I test ten answers and none of them work, so I have to stop wasting time and debug my own malfunctioning code.
– karel
Jan 4 at 14:51