Best font for programming?
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I just went through the Adobe rigmarole to test out this "Source Code Pro" font. You have to have their application running to use the "free" font! I have tested it and it is just not good enough, "Consolas" gives me a better editing environment and I don't have to sign up for endless junk-mail and a monitoring program to use it. I have uninstalled it but their is no mechanism to close or delete my "account" with Adobe. Also when I tried to unsubscribe from their emails it said "page not found" once I clicked the unsubscribe button.:mad:
- I would love to change the world, but they won’t give me the source code.
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I still use Consolas: it's non-proportional, so columns line up, "1" and "l" are visually different, and "0" is barred so it's distinct from "O". Works for me, so I haven't looked at changing it - I'd probably spend far too long deciding, and then get bored with in a week later! Generally speaking, I stick to a limited number of fonts: Calibri for emails, Verdana for "normal" text in documents, Consolas for non-proportional work, Arial Bold when I need emphasis. And "Heart Breaking Bad" when I want to annoy people. Heart Breaking Bad Font | dafont.com[^]
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
Thanks for the link to the Heart Breaking Bad Font. At first I thought that it was BAD and BROKEN. Then I discovered if you just pressed Caps Lock and then didn't use any punctuation like some younger folk do, then it was brilliant. Just replied to an email from the Professor of Chemistry @ UM using it. Don't worry, I am not enrolled in any courses, so no downgraded marks. It is fun to read but not so good as a coding font. Agree with your post re your font choices completely. ....and thanks again for Heart Breaking Bad Font. Annoyingly good fun and I will use it again.
"Rock journalism is people who can't write interviewing people who can't talk for people who can't read." Frank Zappa 1980
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I'm a bit over the Consolas font I've been suing using for coding and I was wondering what everyone else is using for their code font.
cheers Chris Maunder
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I'm a bit over the Consolas font I've been suing using for coding and I was wondering what everyone else is using for their code font.
cheers Chris Maunder
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I'm a bit over the Consolas font I've been suing using for coding and I was wondering what everyone else is using for their code font.
cheers Chris Maunder
Monoid, but not everyone gets on with its clever handling of != <= >=
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I'm a bit over the Consolas font I've been suing using for coding and I was wondering what everyone else is using for their code font.
cheers Chris Maunder
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I'm a bit over the Consolas font I've been suing using for coding and I was wondering what everyone else is using for their code font.
cheers Chris Maunder
I'm still using Consolas. I'm so used to it that it just seems normal. I tried a couple of other fonts a few months ago, but switched back to Consolas. I suppose that the 'best' font is a subjective choice: one that lets you read the code without 'seeing' the font, if you get me.
Mark Just another cog in the wheel
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I'm a bit over the Consolas font I've been suing using for coding and I was wondering what everyone else is using for their code font.
cheers Chris Maunder
I'm currently using WTE the VS2015 default is. I went to check what it was but I don't have the specific item in the dropdown[^] that is used to set the default font (vs font in a few subareas) for some reason. :doh:
Did you ever see history portrayed as an old man with a wise brow and pulseless heart, waging all things in the balance of reason? Is not rather the genius of history like an eternal, imploring maiden, full of fire, with a burning heart and flaming soul, humanly warm and humanly beautiful? --Zachris Topelius Training a telescope on one’s own belly button will only reveal lint. You like that? You go right on staring at it. I prefer looking at galaxies. -- Sarah Hoyt
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I'm a bit over the Consolas font I've been suing using for coding and I was wondering what everyone else is using for their code font.
cheers Chris Maunder
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I'm a bit over the Consolas font I've been suing using for coding and I was wondering what everyone else is using for their code font.
cheers Chris Maunder
I use Droid Sans Mono Slashed It is a Slashed version of Droid Sans Mono The Slashed/Dotted Versions are available here: cosmix.org | Software[^] I have compared to many other fonts, while not perfect, I always end up back on this one. HTH! PS: As a Programmer, I liked 1Lli to be easily differentiated as well as 80O for my old weary eyes!
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You can also download it from https://fonts.google.com/specimen/Source+Code+Pro[^].
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I'm a bit over the Consolas font I've been suing using for coding and I was wondering what everyone else is using for their code font.
cheers Chris Maunder
Georgia 11. I already know that I'm committing some crime by using a proportional font for coding, but I'm not stuck in the 1980s.
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I'm a bit over the Consolas font I've been suing using for coding and I was wondering what everyone else is using for their code font.
cheers Chris Maunder
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I'm a bit over the Consolas font I've been suing using for coding and I was wondering what everyone else is using for their code font.
cheers Chris Maunder
I've been really liking Monoid. Been using it for the past year or so. GitHub - larsenwork/monoid: Customisable coding font with alternates, ligatures and contextual positioning. Crazy crisp at 12px/9pt. http://larsenwork.com/monoid/[^]
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I'm a bit over the Consolas font I've been suing using for coding and I was wondering what everyone else is using for their code font.
cheers Chris Maunder
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fixedsys of course! :)
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I'm a bit over the Consolas font I've been suing using for coding and I was wondering what everyone else is using for their code font.
cheers Chris Maunder
Since it isn't 1980 and I'm not making ASCII-art, I prefer proportional fonts even for coding. But seriously, I find that it makes code more readable because the eyes tend not to get caught in the rivers and lakes that easily form with fixed-width fonts. Also, we all want to get the most out of limited screen real-estate, but the only way to do that with fixed fonts is to squish even the widest characters beyond a reasonably readable point. I prefer MS Reference Sans Serif, which has clear distinctions between all the ambiguous chars (e.g., Il1 and 0O).
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Its big, easy to read, and stands out. I have been using it since the earliest days of programming. :)
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Chris Maunder wrote:
the Consolas font I've been suing for coding
I hope you've got some good lawyers! :laugh:
"These people looked deep within my soul and assigned me a number based on the order in which I joined." - Homer