zulip/templates/zerver/api/get-org-emoji.md

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# Get all custom emoji
Get all the custom emoji in the user's organization.
`GET {{ api_url }}/v1/realm/emoji`
## Usage examples
{start_tabs}
{tab|python}
{generate_code_example(python)|/realm/emoji:get|example}
{tab|js}
More examples and documentation can be found [here](https://github.com/zulip/zulip-js).
```js
const zulip = require('zulip-js');
// Download zuliprc-dev from your dev server
const config = {
zuliprc: 'zuliprc-dev',
};
zulip(config).then((client) => {
return client.emojis.retrieve();
}).then(console.log);
```
{tab|curl}
```
curl {{ api_url }}/v1/realm/emoji \
-u BOT_EMAIL_ADDRESS:BOT_API_KEY
```
{end_tabs}
## Arguments
{generate_api_arguments_table|zulip.yaml|/realm/emoji:get}
## Response
#### Return values
* `emoji`: An object that contains `emoji` objects, each identified with their
emoji ID as the key, and containing the following properties:
* `id`: The ID for this emoji, same as the object's key.
* `name`: The user-friendly name for this emoji. Users in the organization
can use this emoji by writing this name between colons (`:name:`).
* `source_url`: The path relative to the organization's URL where the
emoji's image can be found.
* `deactivated`: Whether the emoji has been deactivated or not.
* `author`: An object describing the user who created the custom emoji,
with the following fields:
* `id`: The creator's user ID.
* `email`: The creator's email address.
* `full_name`: The creator's full name.
#### Example response
A typical successful JSON response may look like:
{generate_code_example|/realm/emoji:get|fixture(200)}