Vim Python IDE
Comoji
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Comoji brings Slack-style emoji shortcuts to your Mac.
Type familiar colon commands like :fire:, :whiskey:, or :thumbsup: in your favorite apps, and Comoji instantly turns them into emoji. No hunting through the emoji picker. No memorizing keyboard shortcuts. No manually creating dozens of macOS text replacements.
Comoji is built for people who already use colon notation in Slack, Discord, GitHub, and other modern tools and want the same fast, natural workflow everywhere else. It works wherever you type, including Messages, Mail, Notes, browsers, and more.
Create your own shortcuts, search the full emoji library, and keep your most-used reactions only a few keystrokes away. Whether you are replying to a text, writing an email, or chatting with your team, Comoji makes emoji entry feel effortless.
Simple, fast, and native to macOS, Comoji turns :emoji: into actual emoji anywhere you type.
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Comoji's answer:
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Comoji's answer:
What makes Comoji different is that it is not limited to a single chat app. It gives you one fast, consistent emoji workflow across Messages, Mail, Notes, browsers, and other macOS apps.
Comoji's answer:
Comoji is designed to do one thing exceptionally well: make emoji entry faster across your entire Mac.
Unlike app-specific shortcuts, browser extensions, or manual macOS text replacements, Comoji works system-wide. Type a familiar shortcut like :fire: or :thumbsup: in Messages, Mail, Notes, browsers, and other apps, and Comoji inserts the emoji instantly.
It feels natural if you already use Slack, Discord, or GitHub, but it is useful anywhere you type. There is no need to interrupt your workflow, open the emoji picker, search through categories, or maintain a long list of text replacements.
Comoji is simple, lightweight, and focused. It gives you the speed of modern chat apps without locking you into a specific platform.
Comoji's answer:
Comoji is built for Mac users who type frequently and already rely on emoji as part of everyday communication.
Its primary audience includes people who use Slack, Discord, GitHub, and other tools with :emoji: shortcuts and want the same fast, familiar experience everywhere on macOS. That includes remote workers, developers, designers, students, and anyone who regularly moves between Messages, Mail, Notes, browsers, and workplace chat apps.
Comoji is especially useful for people who find the standard emoji picker slow, disruptive, or tedious and want a quicker way to insert emoji without breaking their typing flow.
Comoji's answer:
Comoji started with a simple frustration: colon-style emoji shortcuts work great in Slack and Discord, but not across the rest of macOS.
Typing :whiskey: or :thumbsup: feels fast and natural in chat apps. In Messages, Mail, Notes, and most other apps, though, you are back to opening the emoji picker or creating manual text replacements one by one.
That workaround quickly becomes tedious and does not scale.
Comoji was built to fix that. It brings the familiar :emoji: workflow to the entire Mac, so inserting emoji feels consistent wherever you type. What began as a small quality-of-life improvement became a focused macOS utility designed to remove one of those everyday annoyances that should have been solved already.
Comoji's answer:
Comoji is built as a native macOS app using Swift and SwiftUI.
It uses macOS Accessibility APIs and Input Monitoring to detect colon-style emoji shortcuts as you type across different apps. A lightweight background menu bar app handles the experience system-wide, while a local emoji alias database powers shortcut matching, custom aliases, and frequently used emoji suggestions.
The app is designed to run locally on your Mac, without requiring a browser extension or a cloud service.