Twitter Introduced Facebook Messenger like Feature, Know-How to Use

On Twitter, you can now add Reaction Emoji to texts like Facebook Messenger in direct messages.
ANKARA, TURKEY - MARCH 16: A picture shows a man holding a cellphone in front of a twitter logo in Ankara, Turkey on March 16, 2017. "Twitter" suspended 636,248 accounts for pro-terrorism and violence contents since the mid 2015 until the end of 2016. (Photo by Gokhan Balci/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images)
ANKARA, TURKEY - MARCH 16: A picture shows a man holding a cellphone in front of a twitter logo in Ankara, Turkey on March 16, 2017. "Twitter" suspended 636,248 accounts for pro-terrorism and violence contents since the mid 2015 until the end of 2016. (Photo by Gokhan Balci/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images)

Micro-blogging website Twitter has introduced a Facebook-like feature. But this post is not a feature of editing. For a long time, Twitter users have been demanding that the edit button be given in the tweet, but it is not so.

Actually now Twitter can use Reaction Emoji in Conversation of DM i.e. Direct Message. You also get a reaction option on Facebook posts. It resembles only this, but some changes will also be seen here.

According to Twitter, it is easy to add emoji to direct messages. Here you can add Reaction Emoji to messages with text and media attachments. For this, you have to go to the message and click the Reaction button. This button will be with heart and plus icon.

You can also bring a reaction emoji by double tapping on the message, after this, you can select and react from the emojis given here. Double tapping will show emoji inside the pop up window here.

If you want, you can take back the reactions i.e. Undo, by doing this, that reaction will be removed from you and the person who sent the message. One thing to keep in mind is that if you use Reaction Emoji on the message of your DM then the notification will be given to the sender.

Now the question is when the edit button will be given in Twitter. Its hint has recently been given by Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey. In a Q&A session, he answered a question and said that we thought about it, but maybe we never bring it up.

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