What is the most aesthetic font you know?
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Below are my preferences… For monospace: 1-Liberation Sans Mono 2-Inconsolata 3-American Typewriter (Decorative) For Serif Font: 1-Baskerville (for long texts) 2-Didot Bold (for titles) 3-Cochin, Rockwell (Decorative) For Sans Serif: 1-Optima (modern feel) 2-Helvetica Neue, Segoe UI, Lato 3-Futura/Gill Sans/Avenir Condensed (Decorative)
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Except for angry notes in the office. You are required by law to use Comic Sans for that! :doh:
Anything that is unrelated to elephants is irrelephant
Anonymous
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The problem with quotes on the internet is that you can never tell if they're genuine
Winston Churchill, 1944
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Never argue with a fool. Onlookers may not be able to tell the difference.
Mark TwainNope: Crazy Killer Font | dafont.com[^] Works really well for inter office memos as well*. * "Works well" as in "they don't bother you again"
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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Nope: Crazy Killer Font | dafont.com[^] Works really well for inter office memos as well*. * "Works well" as in "they don't bother you again"
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
Interesting. If the soapbox ever comes back, that should be the only font available.
"The difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has its limits." - Albert Einstein
"If you are searching for perfection in others, then you seek disappointment. If you seek perfection in yourself, then you will find failure." - Balboos HaGadol Mar 2010
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Below are my preferences… For monospace: 1-Liberation Sans Mono 2-Inconsolata 3-American Typewriter (Decorative) For Serif Font: 1-Baskerville (for long texts) 2-Didot Bold (for titles) 3-Cochin, Rockwell (Decorative) For Sans Serif: 1-Optima (modern feel) 2-Helvetica Neue, Segoe UI, Lato 3-Futura/Gill Sans/Avenir Condensed (Decorative)
My VS is set to use Consolas. The new MS terminal font doesn't look too bad: [Cascadia Code | Windows Command Line](https://devblogs.microsoft.com/commandline/cascadia-code/)
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Below are my preferences… For monospace: 1-Liberation Sans Mono 2-Inconsolata 3-American Typewriter (Decorative) For Serif Font: 1-Baskerville (for long texts) 2-Didot Bold (for titles) 3-Cochin, Rockwell (Decorative) For Sans Serif: 1-Optima (modern feel) 2-Helvetica Neue, Segoe UI, Lato 3-Futura/Gill Sans/Avenir Condensed (Decorative)
I'm a classicist: Monospace: Visual Studio: Consolas Everything else: Courier New Sans Serif: Arial Serif Blech. I hate serif'ed fonts.
Software Zen:
delete this;
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Below are my preferences… For monospace: 1-Liberation Sans Mono 2-Inconsolata 3-American Typewriter (Decorative) For Serif Font: 1-Baskerville (for long texts) 2-Didot Bold (for titles) 3-Cochin, Rockwell (Decorative) For Sans Serif: 1-Optima (modern feel) 2-Helvetica Neue, Segoe UI, Lato 3-Futura/Gill Sans/Avenir Condensed (Decorative)
Webdings, it has aliens, Spiderman, the Mona Lisa, race cars... I love those things in movies, so why not in fonts? ;)
Best, Sander sanderrossel.com Continuous Integration, Delivery, and Deployment arrgh.js - Bringing LINQ to JavaScript Object-Oriented Programming in C# Succinctly
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Below are my preferences… For monospace: 1-Liberation Sans Mono 2-Inconsolata 3-American Typewriter (Decorative) For Serif Font: 1-Baskerville (for long texts) 2-Didot Bold (for titles) 3-Cochin, Rockwell (Decorative) For Sans Serif: 1-Optima (modern feel) 2-Helvetica Neue, Segoe UI, Lato 3-Futura/Gill Sans/Avenir Condensed (Decorative)
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5 x 3 pixels[^], what do you need more? 3 x 3[^] is a little too spartan, even for my taste.
I have lived with several Zen masters - all of them were cats. His last invention was an evil Lasagna. It didn't kill anyone, and it actually tasted pretty good.
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Consolas is filth.
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Below are my preferences… For monospace: 1-Liberation Sans Mono 2-Inconsolata 3-American Typewriter (Decorative) For Serif Font: 1-Baskerville (for long texts) 2-Didot Bold (for titles) 3-Cochin, Rockwell (Decorative) For Sans Serif: 1-Optima (modern feel) 2-Helvetica Neue, Segoe UI, Lato 3-Futura/Gill Sans/Avenir Condensed (Decorative)
I don't really care what my hammer looks like, it just has to do the job.
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Gubtill wrote:
For monospace:
Anonymous Pro - Mark Simonson[^]
Bastard Programmer from Hell :suss: If you can't read my code, try converting it here[^] "If you just follow the bacon Eddy, wherever it leads you, then you won't have to think about politics." -- Some Bell.
That's a beautiful font. A pity the EULA means it can't be used in web apps :(
cheers Chris Maunder
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That 5x3 is a rather remarkable achievement. It could be improved by not bothering with differences between upper and lower case and disambiguating a few letters from numbers.
My old computer has a 64 x 32 or 64 x 64 pixel resolution and a 3x 4 pixel font (all upper case) was used for such things as Tiny BASIC. Memory was a big issue and the font and the routines to draw strings into display memory bloated up the interpreter from 2k to 3k, leaving you with only 1k left for your BASIC programs. My version of this encodes the full set 0f 96 printable ASCII characters in just 288 bytes and about 256 bytes for the drawing routines, a little over 1/2 k total. My font is not monospaced, so I usually get more than 16 characters per line. As a bonus, the routine that draws the characters can also be used to draw sprites. Readability is quite a problem with this sort of fonts. You don't have a pixel to spare, but some characters (like Q, M, W, # or &) need a width of 4 or 5. I find it readable and useful enough for a computer from 1976: COSMAC Elf screenshot[^]
I have lived with several Zen masters - all of them were cats. His last invention was an evil Lasagna. It didn't kill anyone, and it actually tasted pretty good.
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My old computer has a 64 x 32 or 64 x 64 pixel resolution and a 3x 4 pixel font (all upper case) was used for such things as Tiny BASIC. Memory was a big issue and the font and the routines to draw strings into display memory bloated up the interpreter from 2k to 3k, leaving you with only 1k left for your BASIC programs. My version of this encodes the full set 0f 96 printable ASCII characters in just 288 bytes and about 256 bytes for the drawing routines, a little over 1/2 k total. My font is not monospaced, so I usually get more than 16 characters per line. As a bonus, the routine that draws the characters can also be used to draw sprites. Readability is quite a problem with this sort of fonts. You don't have a pixel to spare, but some characters (like Q, M, W, # or &) need a width of 4 or 5. I find it readable and useful enough for a computer from 1976: COSMAC Elf screenshot[^]
I have lived with several Zen masters - all of them were cats. His last invention was an evil Lasagna. It didn't kill anyone, and it actually tasted pretty good.
Thanks for the screenshot! It did some good to grow up on systems like this. CPUs are now so fast, and memory so cheap, that you get folks developing systems that need to scale using approaches like Thread Per User, Thread Per Request, or even Thread Per Object. And then wondering why the system tips over.
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Gubtill wrote:
For monospace:
Anonymous Pro - Mark Simonson[^]
Bastard Programmer from Hell :suss: If you can't read my code, try converting it here[^] "If you just follow the bacon Eddy, wherever it leads you, then you won't have to think about politics." -- Some Bell.
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Below are my preferences… For monospace: 1-Liberation Sans Mono 2-Inconsolata 3-American Typewriter (Decorative) For Serif Font: 1-Baskerville (for long texts) 2-Didot Bold (for titles) 3-Cochin, Rockwell (Decorative) For Sans Serif: 1-Optima (modern feel) 2-Helvetica Neue, Segoe UI, Lato 3-Futura/Gill Sans/Avenir Condensed (Decorative)
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Below are my preferences… For monospace: 1-Liberation Sans Mono 2-Inconsolata 3-American Typewriter (Decorative) For Serif Font: 1-Baskerville (for long texts) 2-Didot Bold (for titles) 3-Cochin, Rockwell (Decorative) For Sans Serif: 1-Optima (modern feel) 2-Helvetica Neue, Segoe UI, Lato 3-Futura/Gill Sans/Avenir Condensed (Decorative)
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Below are my preferences… For monospace: 1-Liberation Sans Mono 2-Inconsolata 3-American Typewriter (Decorative) For Serif Font: 1-Baskerville (for long texts) 2-Didot Bold (for titles) 3-Cochin, Rockwell (Decorative) For Sans Serif: 1-Optima (modern feel) 2-Helvetica Neue, Segoe UI, Lato 3-Futura/Gill Sans/Avenir Condensed (Decorative)
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Below are my preferences… For monospace: 1-Liberation Sans Mono 2-Inconsolata 3-American Typewriter (Decorative) For Serif Font: 1-Baskerville (for long texts) 2-Didot Bold (for titles) 3-Cochin, Rockwell (Decorative) For Sans Serif: 1-Optima (modern feel) 2-Helvetica Neue, Segoe UI, Lato 3-Futura/Gill Sans/Avenir Condensed (Decorative)
Hmm. Do I dare? I'm not dyslexic, but I am loving the OpenDyslexic font Money makes the world go round ... but documentation moves the money.