Install
openclaw skills install cashu-emojiEncode and decode Cashu tokens that are hidden inside emojis using Unicode variation selectors.
openclaw skills install cashu-emojiThis skill helps agents decode Cashu tokens received as emoji (and encode tokens for sending), and it also supports general hidden messages inside emojis.
If the decoded text starts with cashu, it’s likely a Cashu token. Otherwise treat it as a plain hidden message.
Some services embed a cashu... token into an emoji using Unicode variation selectors (VS1..VS256). Chat apps often display only the emoji, but preserve the hidden selector characters.
Important: many messengers can truncate or normalize Unicode. If the variation selectors are lost, the embedded token cannot be recovered.
git clone https://github.com/robwoodgate/cashu-emoji.git
cd cashu-emoji
npm ci
# decode a whole message (recommended)
node ./bin/cashu-emoji.js decode "<paste message>"
# decode and print mint/unit/amount if it’s a cashu token
node ./bin/cashu-emoji.js decode "<paste message>" --metadata
# decode as structured JSON (agent-friendly)
node ./bin/cashu-emoji.js decode "<paste message>" --metadata --json
# encode a hidden message
node ./bin/cashu-emoji.js encode "🥜" "hello from inside an emoji"
# encode a cashu token
node ./bin/cashu-emoji.js encode "🥜" "cashuB..."
cashuA.../cashuB... tokennode ./bin/cashu-emoji.js decode "<paste entire message>"
Decode semantics (important): the decoder ignores normal characters until it finds the first variation-selector byte, then collects bytes until the first normal character after that payload begins.
🥜) and a token stringnode ./bin/cashu-emoji.js encode "🥜" "cashuB..."
Tip: some messengers are less likely to deliver a truncated/corrupted emoji-token if any normal text follows it (even a single character). It’s not required, just a delivery reliability trick.
Tip (Telegram): sending the emoji-token inside a code block / “monospace” formatting can help preserve the hidden characters and makes it easier to tap-to-copy.
To sanity-check the decoded token without redeeming it, you can request metadata.
For programmatic/agent use, prefer JSON output:
node ./bin/cashu-emoji.js decode "<message>" --metadata --json
Example JSON response (Cashu token):
{
"text": "cashuB...",
"isCashu": true,
"metadata": {
"mint": "https://mint.example",
"unit": "sat",
"amount": 21
},
"metadataError": null
}
Example JSON response (plain hidden message):
{
"text": "hello from inside an emoji",
"isCashu": false
}
node ./bin/cashu-emoji.js decode "<message>" --metadata
This prints mint/unit/amount using @cashu/cashu-ts getTokenMetadata() (no mint calls).
cashu... token is a bearer asset. Treat it like cash.--metadata is a local parse. It can’t prove the token is unspent/valid.src/emoji-encoder.ts: core encode/decodebin/cashu-emoji.js: CLI wrapperexamples/: test vectorsThis tool only encodes/decodes text. It does not spend funds.