Having the pen on two proposals which are bringing (or have brought) over 
15,000 characters in the standard, I can tell you this will not repeat very 
fast. The next monster in the horizon is Mayan and that one will take a while. 
Emoji only add a few characters per year. Therefore, it is not the issue. The 
major contributors to expansion these days are either historical writing 
systems (finite by definition) or recently invented ones, which take some 
persuasion to be incorporated for good reasons. Modern writing systems encoding 
is done. There are still some underserved communities, but it is not that much 
in terms of needed encoding space.

In other words, not an issue by any mean. The limit of 15 planes (the 2 PUA 
planes don't count) is not an issue unless you are trying to make Unicode a 
glyph repository (another can of worms).

Michel

-----Original Message-----
From: Unicode <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Mark E. Shoulson 
via Unicode
Sent: Sunday, March 22, 2026 7:09 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Are there [start] emoji [end] style codes?

I remember feeling a twinge of this worry (long before emoji) back when Unicode 
officially limited itself to 17 planes instead of the 65535 planes of 
full-blown (at the time) ISO-10646. (That's a thing that happened, right?  Or 
am I inventing history?)  Gee, sooner or later things will run out...  But be 
realistic.  It *is* true that with characters always being added and never 
removed, eventually the current stock could eventually run out; that's just 
math.  But it isn't just the current trends place that happening way in the 
future; we also don't expect current trends to continue.  Unicode was never 
meant to be infinite and encompass every kind of writing that will ever be 
invented.  We're already filling in the corners with obscure scripts now, and 
there are only so many more writing systems worth encoding. Same with emoji 
(well, maybe).  We would hope that the growth of the emoji set would slow down 
as most of the important symbols get encoded. (It is a little ha!
 rd to say for certain because emoji aren't like other things, and we're still 
sort of figuring out how to treat them.)

So, yes, I understand the knee-jerk feeling that "there's only a limited 
supply!" and also the feeling that everyone else is just pretending the problem 
is SOOO far in the future when they should know better... but it really kind of 
*is* that far off.


~mark

On 3/22/26 6:06 PM, Doug Ewell via Unicode wrote:
> Lee Shallis wrote:
>
>> Sooner or later the current pool will run out.
> That’s like saying “Sooner or later, the earth will crash into the sun.” It’s 
> not like Y2K, where developers created problems that surfaced within decades; 
> this is more like centuries or millennium.
>
> You may want to examine this page if you are interested in the actual rate at 
> which the Unicode codespace is being consumed:
>
> https://www.unicode.org/versions/stats/
>
> --
> Doug Ewell, CC, ALB | Lakewood, CO, US | ewellic.org
>

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