Codes & Technical Details
- Emoji
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π - Unicode
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U+1F602 - HTML Entity
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😂 - CSS
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content: "\1F602"; - JavaScript
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"\u{1F602}" - Shortcode
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:joy:
Alt names: joy
What Does the Face With Tears Of Joy Emoji Mean?
The π Face With Tears Of Joy emoji is most often used to convey an emotion or reaction in the moment β reading the specific expression is usually more reliable than the literal name, since tone and context shift how it lands in a conversation.
Common Uses
- Texting and DMs to react quickly without typing a full reply
- Social captions, where it adds tone or context at a glance
- Group chats, as a quick acknowledgement or reaction
- Posts specifically about face with tears of joy
History
Face With Tears Of Joy was added to Unicode in version 0.6. Like most emoji, it started in Japanese mobile carrier sets before being standardized so it renders consistently (with platform-specific art styles) across iOS, Android, and the web.
Platform Compatibility
Face With Tears Of Joy renders on all major platforms that support Unicode 0.6 and later, including iOS, Android, Windows, macOS, and the major browsers and chat apps. If it shows as a blank box or placeholder, the device’s font/OS is out of date rather than the emoji itself being unsupported.
Emoji Combinations
- ππ―
- ππ
- ππ₯
Frequently Asked Questions
What does the Face With Tears Of Joy emoji mean?
The π Face With Tears Of Joy emoji is most often used to convey an emotion or reaction in the moment β reading the specific expression is usually more reliable than the literal name, since tone and context shift how it lands in a conversation.
How do I copy the Face With Tears Of Joy emoji?
Tap or click the Copy button on this page and π is copied to your clipboard, ready to paste anywhere.
What is the Unicode for the Face With Tears Of Joy emoji?
The Unicode sequence is U+1F602 β the HTML entity, CSS, JavaScript, and shortcode forms are all listed in the codes table above.
Does the Face With Tears Of Joy emoji look different on iPhone vs Android?
Yes β each platform (Apple, Google, Samsung, etc.) draws its own art for the same Unicode character, so the exact style varies slightly by device even though the underlying code point and meaning stay the same.
Browse more Smileys & Emotion emojis or explore all emoji categories.