-
4 votes
-
Emoji history: The missing years
6 votes -
Study finds emojis are differently interpreted depending on gender, culture, and age of viewer
35 votes -
The Emoji Kitchen
6 votes -
Noto Emoji: A new black and white emoji font
19 votes -
The past and future of flag emoji
4 votes -
Pressing flesh against flesh 🤝: The multi-skin toned handshake emoji reveals that it is more than a routine gesture
9 votes -
The 👁👄👁 debacle sums up tech's race issues
19 votes -
Facebook and Instagram ban usage of "commonly sexual emojis" along with solicitations for nude images or sex
10 votes -
Coalition of charitable and peace-building organisations in Finland crowdsource for 'forgiveness' emoji
6 votes -
Google releases fifty-three gender fluid emoji
16 votes -
How do you say "you're welcome" or "no problem" with reaction emojis?
Someone pings you in slack or github (or discord or on a forum post or wherever) asking for something. Perhaps some advice or a code review. After you help them out, they say "Thanks!". In normal...
Someone pings you in slack or github (or discord or on a forum post or wherever) asking for something. Perhaps some advice or a code review. After you help them out, they say "Thanks!". In normal conversation, I would respond with a "You're welcome" or "no problem" or something.
The problem I have is that while I want to be polite and acknowledge their thank you message, I don't want to generate notifications or otherwise distract people. Responding with a github comment will notify and probably email any involved persons. Slack and discord it depends on the channel, but many channels have low enough traffic that I will check every time theres a new message in that channel (and I'm sure I'm not the only one monitoring those channels).
Its not really a big deal and no one is going to get angry about it - but it can distract people or ruin their flow while working and I want to avoid that. In my mind, a reaction emoji is perfect for this. It acknowledges the comment or message if someone looks, but doesn't send notifications or light up the channel name.
...but which reaction should I use? I've never seen a "you're welcome" emoji. I've been typically using a thumbs up (
:+1:
), but that can look as if someone is seconding the thanks rather than me trying to acknowledge it.Is there a better way to say "you're welcome" or "no problem" in this situation? Is there a better reaction emoji on github/slack/discord/your communication platform of choice? Should I stop worrying about possibly savings other people an email or small distraction and just say "np" or something?
10 votes -
Animating URLs with Javascript and Emojis
15 votes -
Macs bought in China can no longer display the 🇹🇼 Taiwan Flag Emoji, no matter which region is set in System Preferences
27 votes -
Emoji are showing up in court cases exponentially, and courts aren’t prepared
24 votes -
All 230 new emojis coming in 2019
31 votes -
What's your favourite emoji?
There're so many options—I'm particularly impartial to ⛹♀️ right now because I've never actually seen it used.
7 votes