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What's your preferred programming font?

There's an existing question like this. However, there are over 100 answers, most of which are just, "+1 MyFontOfChoice, blah, blah, blah". No offense to others involved in that post, but I was hoping we could get a more organized set of responses.

Rules

  • ONE post per font. If there is already a post for the font of your choice, upvote it.
  • Start new posts by listing the font name on the first line in bold.
  • Link the font name to a download if one is available.
  • List relevant details concisely.
  • Don't list superfluous details. For example, we'll assume the font is free unless stated otherwise, we'll assume the font is monospaced unless stated otherwise, etc.
  • If you have a good image of the font, preferably with standard text ("The quick brown fox...", "abc...123..."), put it after the details.
  • Save any personal comments ("I love using X font with editor Y") for the very end of the post or better yet, just append them as a separate comment.

Example

Consolas

Must use ClearType or it looks terrible.

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1  
Isn't this a duplicate of: stackoverflow.com/questions/4689/… ? – Outlaw Programmer Jan 27 at 21:27
5  
@Outlaw Programmer - Yes it is. I actually explained that and had a link to that question in my post :) – whatknott Jan 27 at 21:39
4  
just arguing my case. yes, the other question is similar, but i don't see how it's possible to clean up the question and 100+ answers to conform to the rules of this post. for example, for the number one answer on the other question, do people like consolas or andale mono? you can't tell. – whatknott Feb 27 at 14:32
1  
maybe what i'm looking for out of this question is more of a "poll" rather than a question and answer. – whatknott Feb 27 at 14:37
1  
Gotta agree with whatknott - this is a "poll" type question done right, i.e. so that the voting system will actually tell us something – Jonik May 28 at 17:29
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34 Answers

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Consolas

Must use ClearType or it looks terrible.

Picture

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6  
Consolas is the only font which I rate above Courier New for programming. Mostly, I like it because it has a good height:width ratio and it doesn't remind me of DOS. :-) – Ben Blank Jan 27 at 22:09
1  
Wow, I never saw that before ... just switched, thanks! – LuckyLindy Feb 27 at 4:05
2  
Consolas is great - except when you using a Remote Desktop session - then ClearType turns off. Oh the humanity it looks bad. – rein Jun 17 at 15:52
3  
I spoke to Kevin Larson of Microsoft's Typography group about this font a few years ago at a conference (HCI 2006), here is one way they've used to determine whether a font is better than another- affect.media.mit.edu/pdfs/05.larson-picard.pdf/… – RichardOD Jun 19 at 14:02
1  
I personally use 11px size because Consolas seems to shrink text more than most fonts. 11px looks like 10 in most other fonts. – musicfreak Jun 25 at 6:17
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vote up 0 vote down

Fixedsys

Windows
9 pt

Picture

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2  
I love filled boxes! :) – Lucas Jones Jun 19 at 15:36
vote up 5 vote down

Comic Sans

Comic Sans

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3  
Comic Sans is actually the default font for comments in Notepad++... – Thomas Feb 27 at 1:44
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vote up 4 vote down

I'd recommend taking a look at the Programming Fonts post on Coding Horror. It has plenty of recommendations with screenshots too.

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2  
Great link but could we get it added as a comment to the question and keep posts specific to a single font? – whatknott Jan 27 at 21:26
vote up 16 vote down

Courier New

And a big high-resolution monitor.

Courier New

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vote up 34 vote down

Monaco

OS X
Wikipedia article

Picture

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2  
I use this on Windows - gringod.com/2006/11/… – Lucas Jones Jan 27 at 21:37
1  
Oh - a picture if you want - hanselman.com/blog/…, second one down. – Lucas Jones Jan 27 at 21:39
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vote up 18 vote down

Bitstream Vera Sans Mono

Bitstream Vera Sans Mono

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8  
Try DejaVu - same look, but covers much of Unicode – Iraimbilanja Jan 27 at 21:32
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vote up 8 vote down

Proggy Clean

Proggy fonts are available in Bitmap, TrueType, PCF, and Mac formats.

Proggy Clean font example

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vote up 19 vote down

Lucida Console

Lucida Console

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3  
The short upper case characters really bug me in this font, check out the "Th" - that's why I prefer Lucida Sans Typewriter. – Mark Ransom Jan 28 at 6:25
1  
Yes, it can be hard to distinguish between, for example, O and o in this font. – Thomas Feb 27 at 1:41
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vote up 5 vote down

Lucida Sans Typewriter

$75 for four fonts (regular, bold, italic, bold-italic).

Lucida Sans Typewrite

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vote up 5 vote down

Terminus

Good Unicode coverage, distinct "0O1Il|", bold variant, and bitmapped, so none of that blurry crap.

Terminus

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vote up 2 vote down

Panic Sans

Included in the wonderful for other-reasons-too, Coda.

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vote up -1 vote down

10pt Courier New with no antialiasing or anything

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vote up 6 vote down

Dina

Proggy derivative

Dina

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vote up 0 vote down

Verdana

Variable-width
Easy to read at small sizes

Picture

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vote up 3 vote down

Pragmata

Costs 90 euros.
9pt is ideal.

Pragmata

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4  
90 euros for a single font? Yikes! – rmz Jun 17 at 16:01
2  
!!! For €90 each shape better be made up of naked flexible girls! But that wouldn't be very pragmatic, would it? – P Daddy Jun 26 at 14:34
vote up -4 vote down

I prefer syntax highlighting that supports multiple fonts in multiple sizes. Editors like Source Insight and even Notepad++ allow you to customize syntax highlighting not only by text color, but also by the font family and font size.

You can do things like make class declarations and member declarations a larger font size to stand-out a little and make comments a different font family to blend into the background and look less like code.

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vote up 25 vote down

DejaVu Sans Mono


alt text

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vote up 1 vote down

I'm old. I like my fonts monospaced and big, My default gnometerm uses monospace 16. Subtleties of antialiasing and what not are lost on me.

I generally use the maximize button and make the terminal window fill the whole screen, have several of these going at once, of different background colors (I rigged a taskbar icon to start gnome terms with a different color each time it's clicked) and use alt-tab to switch between these, which works pretty well.

In my younger days, I'd often set up four windows taking up a quarter of the screen each, but my eyes these days prefer one big window covering the whole screen.

Getting old sucks. At least the tools accommodate this particular weakness.

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vote up 5 vote down

6x13

It's a bitmap font available only on X-Windows, but similar to 9pt Monaco bitmap from the Macs of yore.

6x13

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vote up -1 vote down

Syntax (Oberon version) was a font I really loved when I used to program in Oberon on DEC and later Ceres-3 workstations, but then Oberon's an oddity as source was written in a rich-text editing environment with proportional fonts.

The Syntax bitmap that came with Oberon had italics with far more flair than the official outline font version from Linotype.

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vote up 5 vote down

Liberation Mono

Font Sample

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vote up 3 vote down

Monofur

It's a bit unusual and doesn't look very console-y, but comes with real italics.

I'm strange like that.

Monofur

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