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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I use Consolas for everything, including Notepad++, SQL Studio, Eclipse, etc. I wish there was a Mac version. Also, if you notice, the text area field on Stack Overflow uses Consolas, so we have some other fans out there as well :p |
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I don't use Consolas, though it does look good on LCD, but sometimes I'm not on LCD, like when I'm giving presentations and then it looks crap. My current font of choice for programming is the Liberation Mono font. Oh man, just discovered why the text on Stack Overflow looks like crap, it forces Consolas which is a cleartype font, and on my current setup which didn't have cleartype enabled, it looks very bad. Going to make a bugreport on uservoice. |
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For UltraEdit and anything for that matter, I use the good old Courier New.
I've found Consolas to difficult to read with it's over anti-aliasing. |
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Adding a vote for Consolas. It feels very easy on my eyes. |
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+1 for Consolas, together with a proper Color Scheme (I use the white one at the first screenshot) |
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I never found a reason to stray from Courier New. I don't think I'd have a problem with any font so long as it's sans-serif. Mono-spaced fonts are nice for coding, too. |
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I use Inconsolata with UltraEdit on Windows. With TextMate (on the Mac) I prefer Monaco (it's the default font). |
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+1 for Monaco, although this blog post is making me think about switching to Inconsolata. I'm curious as to what point size y'all use, I use the TextMate default size of 12pt. |
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I like Fixedsys in Visual Studio. It's a classic. No anti-aliasing blur.
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I use Consolas on my mac, BTW; here's a link to download the consolas TTF files if you want to install this (Mac/Win/Linux). /mp |
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I have to agree with Kevin Kenny, Proggy fonts all the way, though I prefer Proggy Clean. But either way you have to go with a font that clearly shows the difference between the number 0 and the letter O. Which the preview font here doesn't really show that. |
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Courier New has serifs. |
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I'm on PanicSans 12pt w/ AA on TextMate, but loving Inconsolata on Terminal/vim... (debating changing my TM font to this one... but point size 14pt) :) |
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Consolas for me as well |
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Inconsolata 14pt in TextMate |
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I like Envy Code R.
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I really really like DejaVu Sans Mono. It is very clean and easy on the eyes. |
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Lucida Sans Typewriter |
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I just tried Consolas and Envy - Envy seems "too narrow" to my eyes, but Consolas looks great (I am on a mac). Thanks for the tips ! |
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Courier New for me as well, it's well spaced. |
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Another vote for Consolas for code editing, and Dina for console output. |
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Verdana - Variable width and easy to read on screen at small sizes. |
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I like Consolas too, but I also like Anonymous: http://www.ms-studio.com/FontSales/anonymous.html |
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Lucida Console every time. I've never found a font that can pack as many lines of code onto the screen at the same point size without looking cramped. And it looks nice too. |
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I have been using the Dina - http://www.donationcoder.com/Software/Jibz/Dina/index.html - font for awhile now for text editing and it seems to be doing the job nicely. |
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Another vote for Consolas. My favorite IDE font at the moment. |
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I just recently switched from Bitstream Vera Sans Mono to Inconsolata, but reading the answers here, I'm going to give Consolas a chance for a bit. Looks really nice so far. |
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I've really fallen in love with Droid Sans Mono.
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