Modern **drop-in replacement** for projects like [Twemoji-Amazing](https://github.com/SebastianAigner/twemoji-amazing), with some **quality-of-life improvements**:
- See file listing [here (GitLab)](https://octtspacc.gitlab.io/twemoji-astonishing/index.html), or [here (GitHub)](https://octospacc.github.io/twemoji-astonishing/index.html); archives are in the "Archives" directory.
This means that you are free to write text inside those HTML tags - including emoji characters, that will act as a **fallback on unsupported platforms** (very old browsers), while also **allowing emojis to be copied** with other text when that gets selected. In fact, you should do this.
- You can **look for emoji names, codes, and characters** at [Emoji List](https://unicode.org/emoji/charts/emoji-list.html) by the Unicode Consortium. The names you get from the table correspond to the CSS class names if you remove letter accents, remove special characters, and replace spaces with dashes.
- [Emojipedia](https://emojipedia.org) is also a **great resource** for finding emoji information - the above, but also much more. For each emoji on the site, the URL names correspond to the CSS class names.
The project exists solely on top of [Twemoji](https://twemoji.twitter.com). Their graphics are licensed under [CC BY 4.0](https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0). Please adhere to the [Twemoji attribution requirements](https://github.com/twitter/twemoji#attribution-requirements) when using these emojis.
The included tools for building the CSS files scrape the latest version of the [emoji-test.txt](https://unicode.org/Public/emoji/) list from the Unicode Consortium. See that for copyright and licensing.