+++ title = "Working Around GitHub Browser Sniffing to Get Better Emoji on Linux" date = 2020-06-19T18:03:43+10:00 # [extra] # updated = 2020-06-19T09:30:00+10:00 +++ I have my system configured[^1] to use [JoyPixels] for emoji, which I consider vastly more attractive than Noto Color Emoji. Sadly GitHub uses browser sniffing to detect Linux user-agents and replaces emoji with (badly aligned) images of Noto Color Emoji. They don't do this on macOS and Windows. In this post I explain how I worked around this.
Screenshot of GitHub showing two comments, one with emoji set in the Noto Color Emoji font, the other in the JoyPixels Font.
The solution is simple: make GitHub think you're using a Mac or Windows PC. There are various ways to change the User-Agent string of Firefox. The easiest is via `about:config` but I didn't want it to be a global change — I want sites to know that I'm using Linux in logs/privacy respecting analytics (I block most trackers). I ended up using the [User-Agent Switcher and Manager] browser add-on. I configured its allow list to only include `github.com`, and use the `User-Agent` string for Firefox on macOS. The end result? JoyPixels, just like I wanted. **P.S.** If anyone from GitHub sees this. Please stop browser sniffing Linux visitors. Linux desktops and browsers have had working emoji support for years now. [^1]: I use the term, "configured", loosely here as all I really did was install the [ttf-joypixels](https://www.archlinux.org/packages/community/any/ttf-joypixels/) package. [JoyPixels]: https://www.joypixels.com/ [User-Agent Switcher and Manager]: https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/user-agent-string-switcher/