U+1F9D7 Person Climbing
U+1F9D7 was added in Unicode version 10.0 in 2017. It belongs to the block
This character is a Other Symbol and is commonly used, that is, in no specific script.
The glyph is not a composition. Its East Asian Width is wide. In bidirectional text it acts as Other Neutral. When changing direction it is not mirrored. U+1F9D7 prohibits a line break after it, if it’s followed by an emoji modifier.
The CLDR project calls this character “person climbing” for use in screen reading software. It assigns these additional labels, e.g. for search in emoji pickers: climb, climber, climbing, mountain, person, rock, scale, up.
This character is designated as an emoji. It will be rendered as colorful emoji on conforming platforms. To reduce it to a monochrome character, you can combine it with
The Wikipedia has the following information about this codepoint:
Climbing is the activity of using one's hands, feet, or other parts of the body to ascend a steep topographical object that can range from the world's tallest mountains (e.g. the eight thousanders) to small boulders. Climbing is done for locomotion, sporting recreation, for competition, and is also done in trades that rely on ascension, such as construction and military operations. Climbing is done indoors and outdoors, on natural surfaces (e.g. rock climbing and ice climbing), and on artificial surfaces (e.g. climbing walls and climbing gyms)
The sport of climbing evolved by climbers making first ascents of new types of climbing routes, using new climbing techniques, at ever-increasing grades of difficulty, with ever-improving pieces of climbing equipment. Guides and guidebooks were an important element in developing the popularity of the sport in the natural environment. Early pioneers included Walter Bonatti, Riccardo Cassin, Hermann Buhl, and Gaston Rébuffat, who were followed by and Reinhold Messner and Doug Scott, and later by Mick Fowler and Marko Prezelj, and Ueli Steck. Since the 1980s, the development of the safer format of bolted sport climbing, the wider availability of artificial climbing walls and climbing gyms, and the development of competition climbing, increased the popularity of rock climbing as a sport, and led to the emergence of professional rock climbers, such as Wolfgang Güllich, Alexander Huber, Chris Sharma, Adam Ondra, Lynn Hill, Catherine Destivelle, and Janja Garnbret.
Climbing became an Olympic sport for the first time in the 2021 Olympic Games in Tokyo (see Sport climbing at the 2020 Summer Olympics) in that format that included competition lead climbing, competition bouldering, and competition speed climbing disciplines; competition ice climbing is not yet an Olympic sport.
Representations
System | Representation |
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Nº | 129495 |
UTF-8 | F0 9F A7 97 |
UTF-16 | D8 3E DD D7 |
UTF-32 | 00 01 F9 D7 |
URL-Quoted | %F0%9F%A7%97 |
HTML hex reference | 🧗 |
Wrong windows-1252 Mojibake | 🧗 |
Encoding: GB18030 (hex bytes) | 95 30 E0 39 |
Elsewhere
Complete Record
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10.0 (2017) | |
PERSON CLIMBING | |
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Supplementary Private Use Area-A | |
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