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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Either Consolas (download) or Andale Mono (download). I mostly use Andale Mono. I wrote an article about programming fonts a long time ago, I think Consolas wasn't even out yet.
I find that typing |
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try Lucida Grande.. Amazing!! |
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Fixedsys Excelsior 2.00, Raize, and the usuals. |
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I use
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Consolas. Italic for comments. Only way. Nahh just kidding, the best programming font is this! Here's your first C program: Recommended for high readability. |
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arial is best |
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Monaco, 11pt, antialias, on Mac OS X. Looks ever better, and crisper on darker backgrounds.
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Consolas and Courier New under Windows, Inconsola under *nix. I really miss the old IBM terminal fonts, though. The one from green/orange terminals. |
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I use MonteCarlo, which is based on ProFont but has a bold face too. That way IDEs/editors that use bold as part of their syntax highlighting leave your text still properly fixed width.
Like ProFont, Proggy & others, its quite small (& being bitmap based, obviously doesn't scale), but I like a small font for coding and its still extremely clear and easy on the eyes. |
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Consolas - recently switched over to it and it's lovely. |
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Any sans-serif. |
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Consolas, works great for various font sizes, and I can't find anything better. |
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I use Terminuse in almost everything (Eclipse, putty and other terminals): http://fractal.csie.org/~eric/wiki/Terminus_font I must say that I don't get it why most people use small fonts like 9pt, do you have 14" monitors or what? For me the best way is to use font size that makes my monitor display at most one 30-40 line method, this way I need to create smaller methods :) |
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I like consolas too. |
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Any monospace font, really. I honestly don't find it matters too much past that. |
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Bitstream vera sans, a Gnome font. I find its much clearer than Consolas, which is pretty good too.
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bitstream vera sans mono |
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Bitstream Vera Sans Mono. [http://www.dafont.com/bitstream-vera-mono.font] |
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Yet another vote from me for Consolas. I use it since I learned about it from Jeff's blog post. Thanks to you for this advice. It made me improve an aspect of my daily programming life, which I didn't think about much before. |
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Nobody's mentioned it yet, so let me just mention DejaVu Sans Mono, which is a fork of Vera Sans Mono, and is included in most Linux distribs. It supports most of Unicode. |
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I just use Courier New, or whatever monospace font I have available. However, I sometimes like using sans-serif (currently Comic Sans MS) for comments in Notepad++. (However, I now tend more to switch everything to monospace just for consistency in spacing and such.) |
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I've been using Anonymous, but I'll need to check out some of these other fonts. |
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Consolas I use it everywhere, I use it for everything. Advice: stick to it. |
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Verdana - Once I realised that I didn't HAVE to use a mono-spaced font ;-) |
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A excellent CodeProject article that list 33 fonts for programming (With examples of each) |
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I use Bitstream Vera http://www.gnome.org/fonts/ for Visual Studio 2008 paired with the Darkness Theme because my eyes can't deal with white backgrounds. |
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In bash and vim I use Lucida Typewriter, but in Kate, Scintilla, Eclipse, and Netbeans I (currently) use Lucida Casual, i.e., a proportional font. Ten years ago I started using proportional fonts in Visual Studio (MS Comic Sans) and it works very well for me. Colored syntax highlighting in said IDEs provides excellent readability and for text-heavy languages like HTML and LaTeX a proportional font is a natural choice. |
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monaco 12pt, is there any other way? |
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ProFont is a great font for code, Consolas a 2nd runner up. You could always go retro with a little Terminal font for a little nostalgia (customize the background color to black and foreground font to green for the full effect!). |
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