U+1F5DE Rolled-Up Newspaper
U+1F5DE was added in Unicode version 7.0 in 2014. It belongs to the block
This character is a Other Symbol and is commonly used, that is, in no specific script. The character is also known as news.
The glyph is not a composition. It has no designated width in East Asian texts. In bidirectional text it acts as Other Neutral. When changing direction it is not mirrored. U+1F5DE offers a line break opportunity at its position, except in some numeric contexts.
The CLDR project calls this character “rolled-up newspaper” for use in screen reading software. It assigns these additional labels, e.g. for search in emoji pickers: news, newspaper, paper, rolled, rolled-up.
This character is designated as an emoji. It will be rendered as monochrome character on conforming platforms. To enable colorful emoji display, you can combine it with
The Wikipedia has the following information about this codepoint:
A newspaper is a periodical publication containing written information about current events and is often typed in black ink with a white or gray background. Newspapers can cover a wide variety of fields such as politics, business, sports, art, and science. They often include materials such as opinion columns, weather forecasts, reviews of local services, obituaries, birth notices, crosswords, editorial cartoons, comic strips, and advice columns.
Most newspapers are businesses, and they pay their expenses with a mixture of subscription revenue, newsstand sales, and advertising revenue. The journalism organizations that publish newspapers are themselves often metonymically called newspapers. Newspapers have traditionally been published in print (usually on cheap, low-grade paper called newsprint). However, today most newspapers are also published on websites as online newspapers, and some have even abandoned their print versions entirely.
Newspapers developed in the 17th century as information sheets for merchants. By the early 19th century, many cities in Europe, as well as North and South America, published newspapers. Some newspapers with high editorial independence, high journalism quality, and large circulation are viewed as newspapers of record. With the popularity of the Internet, many newspapers are now digital, with their news presented online as the main medium that most of the readers use, with the print edition being secondary (for the minority of customers that choose to pay for it) or, in some cases, retired. The decline of newspapers in the early 21st century was at first largely interpreted as a mere print-versus-digital contest in which digital beats print. The reality is different and multivariate, as newspapers now routinely have online presence; anyone willing to subscribe can read them digitally online. Factors such as classified ads no longer being a large revenue center (because of other ways to buy and sell online) and ad impressions now being dispersed across many media are inputs.
Representations
System | Representation |
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Nº | 128478 |
UTF-8 | F0 9F 97 9E |
UTF-16 | D8 3D DD DE |
UTF-32 | 00 01 F5 DE |
URL-Quoted | %F0%9F%97%9E |
HTML hex reference | 🗞 |
Wrong windows-1252 Mojibake | 🗞 |
alias | news |
Encoding: GB18030 (hex bytes) | 94 39 F9 32 |
Elsewhere
Complete Record
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7.0 (2014) | |
ROLLED-UP NEWSPAPER | |
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