You can also use the Search box in the upper-right section of the window to search for specific emojis and characters. This causes the macOS Characters window to appear, which not only displays all of your Mac’s emojis, but also other special symbols and characters such as math symbols, international currency symbols, and technical symbols. When the System Preferences window opens, click on “Keyboard.”Īfterward, you should see the choice we’re looking for under the “Keyboard” tab.Ĭlick that icon in your menu bar and select “Show Emoji & Symbols.” First click on the Apple Menu to pick that option. If you don’t see anything like that, head on over to System Preferences to turn it on. If it’s already there, it’ll probably look like this square icon (though it may also look like a flag, depending on your settings): Apple’s best guess for the corresponding emoji character will appear in a suggestion pop-up.Īlternatively, you can click the tiny little smiley face next to that field, which will bring up a small window with the emoji list:įinally, one other method for inserting emojis lives within your menu bar.
I suppose Apple assumes we want to be all grown-up and stuff with our emails or something but childish with our texts! Well, they would be wrong, because I want to be childish all the time.Īnyway…within Messages, you can often get an emoji by typing its text equivalent into the sending field. Of course, if what you’re wanting to do is insert an emoji into a text message, Apple has provided a couple of built-in ways to do it within the Messages app.
This keyboard shortcut is, well, short for the menu item Edit > Emoji & Symbols, so if you’re more of a “pick from menus” person than a “memorizing shortcuts” person, then you could go that route instead. When you’ve found that perfect emoji, just click on it to insert it into your document or application at your current cursor location. You can browse the entire list of emojis by scrolling down, or jump to a particular category by clicking the corresponding black and white icon at the bottom of the window. …and a tiny little window with emojis will show up wherever you are. Press those three keys all at once on your keyboard… The first (and maybe simplest) way to insert emojis is by just using a keyboard shortcut: Control-Command-Spacebar. Depending on your perspective, this will either jazz up your communications or bring them down a level of sophistication or two.
So for today, I’d like to cover how to insert emojis on the Mac while you’re typing something. How do you insert them? It’s not nearly as straightforward as it is on the iPhone or iPad, where a simple keyboard switch (which is labeled with a smiley face, no less!) will get you into emoji-land. To submit a tech question, e-mail Rob at Follow him on Twitter at /robpegoraro.I find that emojis, those little character faces and symbols that you always see in texts, are a bit confusing for a lot of people on the Mac. Rob Pegoraro is a tech writer based out of Washington, D.C. Or you could take advantage of the marvelous depth and subtlety of the English language to express your wit in an original and memorable way with words alone, the way we all once had to before the advent of computerized correspondence. But try to make sure the rest of your message doesn’t suggest you’re trying to flirt with the recipient - unless that’s actually what you intend. In the meantime, if you use Outlook and you don’t want to confuse your correspondents, the simplest fix is to type a smiley emoticon as a semicolon-parenthesis winking-smiley emoticon: ). It’s also separate from Microsoft’s Outlook apps for iOS and Android.) This has nothing to do with the webmail service once known as Hotmail. There’s no estimate of when a bug-fix will ship, though. Microsoft didn’t say, although PR reps did say the company is working to fix this Outlook problem.
Windows itself supports Unicode, so it’s not clear why Outlook errs with its emoticons by displaying them in a proprietary font. Beyond allowing you to adorn your texts and tweets with emojis for pancakes and bacon, Unicode also brings the less-frivolous benefit of letting you mix Latin characters with those of other languages - even those that, like Arabic and Hebrew, run right to left.