From 2d34710c9f3418c9662d90ef4a75fc5c5153b1d4 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Patrick Spek
Date: Thu, 13 Jul 2023 10:45:01 +0200
Subject: Formatting is very hard
---
.../2023/2023-07-13-getting-emoji-to-work-in-kde-on-debian.md | 8 ++++----
1 file changed, 4 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-)
diff --git a/content/posts/2023/2023-07-13-getting-emoji-to-work-in-kde-on-debian.md b/content/posts/2023/2023-07-13-getting-emoji-to-work-in-kde-on-debian.md
index 14caadf..bce484e 100644
--- a/content/posts/2023/2023-07-13-getting-emoji-to-work-in-kde-on-debian.md
+++ b/content/posts/2023/2023-07-13-getting-emoji-to-work-in-kde-on-debian.md
@@ -26,7 +26,7 @@ and also force it to be used in favour of other emoji fonts if any application
was using that specifically. I have it saved as
`/etc/fonts/conf.d/75-noto-color-emoji.conf`.
-{% highlight xml %}
+```xml
@@ -115,13 +115,13 @@ was using that specifically. I have it saved as
Noto Color Emoji
-{% endhighlight %}
+```
The second configuration file, saved as `/etc/fonts/conf.d/local.conf`, simply
adds the Noto emoji font as a fallback. This enables the use of it when an emoji
is going to be rendered.
-{% highlight xml %}
+```xml
@@ -131,7 +131,7 @@ is going to be rendered.
-{% endhighlight %}
+```
And after this, a relog of your (graphical) session should be all that is needed
in order to make it work. You can easily test it with `notify-send`, or trying
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