In Windows 10, there is a special feature which allows entering Emoji easily. With a hotkey, you can open the Emoji Panel and pick the emoji you want. With recent Windows 10 builds, you can enter multiple emoji at a time. A new option will allow you to automatically close the emoji panel after you choose an emoji. By default, the emoji panel remains open. Here is how to auto close it.
Emojis are smileys and ideograms used in apps, mostly in chats and instant messengers. Smileys themselves are a very old idea. Initially, they were implemented by static images and animated GIFs for web pages and instant messaging apps mostly. Modern smileys, a.k.a. "Emojis", are usually implemented in Unicode fonts and sometimes as images. They are supported by tons of apps on mobile platforms natively, although in Windows Desktop apps, color emoji support is rare unless the app supports DirectWrite. Android, iOS and Windows starting with Windows 8.1 can render emojis via Unicode color fonts.
To enter an emoji, press Win + . to open the Emoji panel. Alternatively, you can press Win + ;. Here is how it looks.
See how to enter Emoji from the keyboard in Windows 10 with Emoji Panel
Starting with Windows 10 Build 17063, you can enable a special option which will allow you to enter multiple emoji at a time. Let's see how to disable it if you are not happy with new default behavior.
How to auto close the Emoji panel
Step 1: Open Settings.
Step 2: Go to Time & language - Keyboard.
Step 3: On the right, click on the link Advanced keyboard settings.
Step 4: Disable the option Don’t close panel automatically after an emoji has been entered.
The emoji panel will close automatically after you enter one emoji.
It is worth mentioning that this option can be enabled or disabled with a Registry tweak. This is useful when you need to customize an offline image or apply this option to a group of computers. Let's see how it can be done.
Close the Emoji panel automatically with a Registry tweak
- Open the Registry Editor app.
- Go to the following Registry key.
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Input\Settings
See how to go to a Registry key with one click.
- On the right, create a new 32-Bit DWORD value EnableExpressiveInputEmojiMultipleSelection.
Note: Even if you are running 64-bit Windows you must still create a 32-bit DWORD value.
Set its value data to 0 to disable the feature. - A value data of 1 will enable it. Or you can just delete the value.
To save your time, you can download the following ready-to-use Registry files:
That's it.
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How about a way to permanently disable access to emojis, and the display of emojis, OS wide, for Windows 7,8,and 10?