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Monaco - the programmer's font
Posted by: ChristTrekker on 2013-08-08 09:02:39
I think Monaco is one of the best, if not the best, programmer's (and general-purpose monospace) font ever. Many agree with me.

But some don't. If you are one of them, what is it you don't like? Are there specific features you don't like, or is it the overall appearance?

Conversely, what are some of the things you think Monaco does right? Or does particularly well, if you do like the font.

Posted by: PowerPup on 2013-08-08 10:54:14
Turns out Monaco was designed by Susan Kare. ๐Ÿ˜Ž

I've probably been using Monaco in Mac OS 7/8/9 and haven't realized it. I program mostly on Windows atm so I use Lucida Console. But yeah, I always use a monospaced font when dealing with source code. ๐Ÿ˜‰

Posted by: tlc630 on 2013-08-08 12:13:29
For programming, I find ProFont to be more useful. Easier to distinguish (and therefore, debug) 1 from l, 0 from O or o, [ from { and ] from } to give the most obvious examples. It has been around since System 7 at least and has been updated to most font formats.

Just my 2ยข

Posted by: ChristTrekker on 2013-08-08 15:35:43
For programming, I find ProFont to be more useful. Easier to distinguish (and therefore, debug) 1 from l, 0 from O or o, [ from { and ] from } to give the most obvious examples.
Monaco has good distinction between those characters, too.

One thing I find helpful for programming, beyond that, is narrow width. Courier is monospaced, but very wide. Monospaced fonts generally tend to seem wide, because they have to be big enough to legibly display characters with 3 and maybe 4 vertical strokes (M, W, @). If it can be more condensed, to fit more on screen, while still readable that's a plus.

Posted by: markyb86 on 2013-08-08 16:01:11
to be honest I like the 40x25 bitmap font on MS DOS.

It helps with the O or 0 by putting a slash through the zero, Capital I has lines at the top and bottom, the 1 has lines at the top and the bottom, etc.

Any font that is easily distinguishable like that helps me a ton.

Here is a clone for modern computers http://www.dafont.com/perfect-dos-vga-437.font

(those fonts are freeware but the author accepts donations)

Posted by: ChristTrekker on 2013-08-09 07:04:15
If you've never used it for coding, here are some Monaco specimens:


Posted by: IPalindromeI on 2013-08-12 16:54:17
I'd love an X bitmap version of this. (yes bitmap - something about them I like)

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