12

How can I disable the font smoothing in the text editor of Visual Studio? On some machines I use, this works, but, not in most of them.

The text in the editor on the left is not really sharp. But the font in Windows is.

7
  • Just out of curiosity, do you have Cleartype disabled in Windows?
    – Brandon
    Nov 9, 2012 at 14:30
  • 2
    Have you seen this post on the Visual Studio website?
    – Brandon
    Nov 9, 2012 at 14:35
  • ClearType is disabled for the Windows windows but not for VS. Strange. You'll need to describe the hammer you used to disable it for Windows. Nov 9, 2012 at 14:37
  • 2
    Your using Consolas in the code window, that font always renders using clear type, you will need to change to something else.
    – Alex K.
    Nov 9, 2012 at 14:44
  • Thanks, that was the problem. Mar 11, 2013 at 12:38

6 Answers 6

16

There is an extension called Text Sharp that allows you to completely disable font smoothing (ClearType) for Visual Studio:

https://visualstudiogallery.msdn.microsoft.com/7aafa2ea-8c54-4da8-922e-d26bf018514d

I'm using this combined with the Source Code Pro font for very readable code.

Well, the characters are at least readable. The code itself may be a different story. :)

1
  • 2
    +1 for differing the characters from the code :D using exactly the same plugin as Visual Studio seems to ignore Windows settings... This should be the accepted answer...
    – FastJack
    Jan 24, 2019 at 10:16
13

In Visual Studio 2019 v16.5.4 (possibly lower), there is a new feature under the Text Editor -> Advanced settings called "Text rendering method". This appears to be defaulted to "ClearType" upon installation. On my machine, I've disabled ClearType at the OS level, yet after a fresh install/update, noticed that my fonts were being smoothed.

Simply switch this setting to "Aliased" to get pixel-perfect font rendering back.

Go to Text Editor - Advanced - Text Rendering Method

Change to Aliased to get pixel perfect rendering back

Again, this assumes you have already disabled ClearType at the system level. I am unsure if VS settings would ignore/override the system-level ClearType settings or not.

2

In my case the problem was that I had the text size to 120%, I just change it to 100%.

Is an option located in Display Settings above the Resolution selector. It says: "Change the size of the text, apps, and other items" set the value to: 100% (Recommended)

This happened to me when I added a new LCD monitor to my setup.

1

According to blogs.msdn.com and this post on SuperUser, you may have to disable it in many places, but for VStudio two are enough:

  • Control Panel > Display > Adjust ClearType Text
  • Control Panel > System > Adjust the appearance and performance of Windows > Visual Effects > Smooth edges of screen fonts

Don't use Consolas as it always uses ClearType, as Alex K. noted in the comments.

Prefer Lucida Console which is a fixed font (they are bold in VStudio's font list in Tools > Options > Environment > Fonts and Colors) and appears not to suffer from the effects of ClearType or smoothed edges.

0

For those willing to disable anti-aliasing/smooth edges/cleartype on VS Code as of today, there's no official option inside the VS Code program to do it. Instead, I have found this method that works for me, and it's thanks to this article: https://medium.com/kasun-kodagoda/fix-text-becomes-blurry-when-vs-code-application-loses-focus-issue-on-windows-d95697b2f927

Here are the steps:

<img src="https://i.stack.imgur.com/L2i9S.png" alt="..." />

Disable anti-aliasing VSCode Image:

Disable anti-aliasing VSCode Image

  1. Right click on VS Code program and go to Proprieties.

  2. In the "target" section of the app, add the following lines: --disable-gpu --enable-use-zoom-for-dsf

  3. Apply the changes and that's it.

I hope it's useful.

-5

For me it helped to switch to "Consolas" font and then back to "Courier New" in Tools->Options->Environment->Fonts and Colors. Don't forget to press "OK" after switching to Consolas.

1
  • 1
    Does not answer how to disable anti-aliasing in Visual Studio without disabling anti-aliasing system-wide.
    – Dmytro
    Jun 24, 2016 at 19:00

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