| Symbol Name | Japanese “acceptable” Button |
| Unicode Version | 0.6 |
| Unicode | U+1F251 |
| Unicode block | |
| General category | Emoji (So) |
| CSS Code |
| UTF-8 | F0 9F 89 91 |
| UTF-16 | D83C DE51 |
| UTF-32 | 0001F251 |
1\documentclass{article}2\usepackage{pifont}3LuaLaTeX/XeLaTeX: literal grapheme cluster or \usepackage{emoji} (engine-dependent)4\end{document}You can type the japanese “acceptable” button symbol on most modern devices with the help of following methods:
Windows: Win + . ; macOS: Ctrl + Cmd + Space; mobile: Symbols & Signs in emoji keyboard.
Edit → Emoji & Symbols, search "japanese “acceptable” button".
Emoji picker (IBus, GNOME Characters) or paste from this page.
Emoji keyboard → Symbols, or search "japanese “acceptable” button".
Emoji keyboard → Symbols; search "japanese “acceptable” button".
1span.japanese-acceptable-button::before { content: "\1F251"; } /* prefer inline grapheme for ZWJ */1<span>🉑</span>Japanese “acceptable” Button symbol's representation in different programming languages can be found in the table below:
| Language | Representation |
|---|---|
| JavaScript / TypeScript | '\uD83C\uDE51' or String.fromCodePoint(0x1F251) |
| Python | '\N{JAPANESE “ACCEPTABLE” BUTTON}' |
| Rust | '\u{1F251}' |
| Swift | "\u{1F251}" |
| Go | string(rune(0x1F251)) |
| Ruby | "\u{1F251}" |
\1F251 |
| Hex Code | 0x1F251 |
| HTML Code | 🉑 |
| LaTeX | LuaLaTeX/XeLaTeX: literal grapheme cluster or \usepackage{emoji} (engine-dependent) |
| Symbol | 🉑 |
| URL encode (UTF-8 percent) | %F0%9F%89%91 |
| Spoken / screen reader name | Japanese “acceptable” Button |