> using various modern command line tools that insist on printing emojis in their output
Ugh. Unpopular opinion this but I personally find this practice repugnant. Same for when used in git commit messages, CI/CD task names and other such places. It just cheapens the quality of the product in my opinion
Graphical characters and symbols like ticks I’m fine with. I have no objection to people wanting to make the terminal pretty. But emojis in software feels like juvenile - like signing a formal letter with your gaming handle.
I want country codes not flags. And check marks do not require emoji.
Every emoji I saw in a terminal or Git commit message was worse than alternatives. This included emoji intended for information not fun. Color made them distracting when the wanted information was anything else. A monochrome font could not solve this because most emoji are too complex to display clearly at normal text sizes without color. They were cumbersome to grep. (Uncommon Unicode characters would have this problem also.) Many had unclear meanings.
Use emoji in your CLIs if you desire. But make them optional. Opt in ideally.
Ugh. Unpopular opinion this but I personally find this practice repugnant. Same for when used in git commit messages, CI/CD task names and other such places. It just cheapens the quality of the product in my opinion
Graphical characters and symbols like ticks I’m fine with. I have no objection to people wanting to make the terminal pretty. But emojis in software feels like juvenile - like signing a formal letter with your gaming handle.