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What fonts do you use for programming, and for what language/IDE? I use Consolas for all my Visual Studio work, any other recommendations?

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Most answers to this question are "+1 for Consolas". If you had specified "only one answer per font" in your question, we could have used voting instead, the way the site was supposed to work. Just saying. – bzlm Sep 28 '08 at 14:51
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113 Answers

vote up 5 vote down

Anarch, 32 points, ofcourse. Code with style!

anarch

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vote up 1 vote down
Tahoma is very readable.

If you need it larger then use Verdana.

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vote up 0 vote down

Lucida Console isn't so good because the bold text takes up more room than the non-bold text. Consolas overcomes this.

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Until I found ProggyTiny, I always made my own fonts using Softy. It's surprisingly easy, and might increase your productivity if you're annoyed by some features of your current font (like "Q is too similiar to 0").

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vote up 0 vote down

I prefer Consolas as well, and obviously cleartype helps when using other fonts.

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vote up 0 vote down

6x13. You can get two terminal or editor windows across a 1024x768 and three onto a 1600x1200 screen. A windows version of this font can be found Here.

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I use Inconsolata in both Linux and Mac OS X.

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I recommend Lucida Console for Windows users and Adobe Courier for Linux/Unix, with a size of 10pt these fonts looks great! and very legible

Edit:

I've been saying that using Lucida Console was a real good option, well, now I know Consolas :)

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vote up 2 vote down

My favourite is ProggyClean at 11px. I've been using it for 2-3 years and it's great for getting lots on screen without being painful to read. It deserves even more attention than the couple of mentions it's had so far:

The site has many variations including slashed zeroes, bold for function marks etc:

(As an aside, my most-loved favourite text editor, TextPad, allows you to have different fonts and font sizes for different file types, which is a really great feature.)

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I've been hanging on to this link for more than a year, it's an article entitled "Five great programming fonts". The five are good fonts, but the article includes comments with a dozen more interesting answers.

http://forums.programming-designs.com/viewtopic.php?pid=3338

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vote up 0 vote down

Monaco 10pt for me.

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vote up 1 vote down

Don't forget the colours!

For some reason Delphi 7 in Twilight does not render Droid Sans Mono well, but in Visual Studio with an orange on black theme it is excellent. Deja Vu Sans Mono is the best all rounder. I use it almost everywhere. Consolas would be excellent apart from its ugly Q glyph.

One other thing I have found since I entered the world of work is that even though I have great eyesight I like to keep my code font around 12 or 13pt size both to reduce eye strain and to make sure I can't put too much text on screen. It's sort of an incentive to keep code blocks vertically short.

I note that this edit box does not respect my browser's default monospaced font. It's giving me Monaco (I'm on OSX). Monaco is horrible. It's glyphs have poorly angled elements and it's capitals are not well proportioned.

Oh, and it almost doesn't matter on Windows because your font will not look right anyway. /me dons flame retardent suit

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vote up 7 vote down

I'm amazed nobody has mentioned Pragmata. It's the BMW of programming fonts. Condensed, readable, and the pinnacle of simple elegance.

alt text

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Bulk purchases? Like buying all the characters at once? – Nosredna Jun 1 at 4:34
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I'd never heard of Droid Sans Mono before, but I installed it and tried it at 9 points, and I must say it's by far the highest quality mono font I've seen on Linux.

On my Mac it's Panic Sans all the way, using it at 11 or 12 points allow anti-aliasing that actually works on monospace, which I've never seen before.

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vote up 10 vote down

I like Profont, I first came across it when Jeff blogged about programming fonts

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I like Consolas myself, but when it comes to monospaced fonts there are quite a few other options to choose from:

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I actually bought The Sans Mono Condensed, which is (was) the goto code font in O'Reilly titles. It's by the same guy as did Consolas for Microsoft (but Consolas wasn't available when I bought it).

It's a really nice, tight, clear face - works really well on slides if you're doing that sort of thing as well.

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vote up 0 vote down

I prefer Profont.

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Instead of just chiming in with another vote for a particular font, I'd recommend reading these comparisons of programming fonts where you can learn a little more:

Jeff Atwood's excellent "round-up":
http://www.codinghorror.com/blog/archives/000157.html

Another review of 5 fonts with nice screenshots:
http://blog.hamstu.com/2008/02/03/the-typography-of-code/

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vote up 0 vote down

For VS nothing beat Fixedsys.

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vote up 0 vote down

Consolas for me. These were specially developped for LCD + MS hint engine. Also you might find ClearType tuner (MS PowerToy) a great addition as it gives you more control over how your fonts look.

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vote up 19 vote down

I use Bitstream Vera Sans Mono, but you need to activate ClearType to get it readable .

I like the 'Illegal1 = O0' readablility test, mentioned earlier in this thread, thanks for that.

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vote up 1 vote down

I never considered changing my font, I have always been happy with Courier. This thread has truely opened my eyes, if only I could upvote it!

Went with Droid Sans Mono.

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vote up 0 vote down

Verdana.
Easy to read, and, very imporetant, easy to distinguish similar characters like O and 0, ( and {, 1 and I and l etc.

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vote up 20 vote down

+1 for Monaco

alt text

Just beautiful and I find I can read it for hours on end.

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I like Terminus for some command line stuff, at least scrolling log files and irssi/irc (TTF versions available). Screenshot of the terminus.ttf in action below (PuTTY on Windows XP with ClearType enabled).

Screenshot of the terminus.ttf in action below (PuTTY on Windows XP with ClearType enabled).

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vote up 0 vote down

I like ProFont TT >tweaked< It's clean and there is a clear difference between 1, l and I and 0 and O.It works best at 9pt. It doesn't scale up very well.

ProFont Windows 9pt

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Its already been said a few times but http://www.proggyfonts.com/ is just awesome. Im a big fan of the Proggy Clean Slashed Zero Bold Punctuation. I do most my work in c# so the bold punctuation is very nice for it.

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vote up 0 vote down

Consolas unless I'm runing over a slow RDP connection with font smoothing turned off, then Lucida Console.

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vote up 2 vote down

Neep Alt 13/17 is very good.

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