• technojamin@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      As a JetBrains Mono user for the past couple of years, I used Monaspace all day this past Friday to try it out, and it was not for me. The oval shape of JetBrains Mono glyphs is so aesthetically pleasing to me, and I don’t think I’d be able to switch to another font that doesn’t have similar styling.

    • tun@lemm.ee
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      11 months ago

      Monaspace AUR-packaged fonts do not registered as monospace font in ArchLinux.

      Though Konsole can be configured to use the font, Kitty does not recognize it. Manual install in macOS works for Kitty.

      I like Neon and Argon variants of Monaspace.

      My favorite was PragmataPro (not free) but it has different glyphs from Nerd Fonts. Similar ones are Iosevka, Victor, Mplus 1 code. Now new favorite is JetbrainsMono NF.

      SF code, Fira Code are also in the favorite list.

      Lab mono, fragment Mono are nice and planning to try them.

      Generally I like condense (but not too condesed) round fonts.

  • MonkCanatella@sh.itjust.works
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    11 months ago

    Try this site and pin the ones you like to compare really easily. You can also change the code to whatever you like.

    I think my main is Hack, though I really like Pragmata and Gintronic. Jetbrains and Firacode are pretty cool, though I much prefer the first three to either, and Jetbrains to firacode.

    One thing I really like about Hack and Gintronic is the very laid back parentheses. They don’t try to enclose the characters inside them like some fonts. They’re both very readable, hack is compact, gintronic is more extended but it has this feeling of everything being a logical block. Pragmata I really like but hard to actually compare it because it’s not on the site I shared above. Pragmata is I think as good as hack and gintronic, and it has the added benefit of having ligatures and nerd font glyphs built in! I’d probably prefer hack or gintronic overall if they had these features but they don’t.

    • nezbyte@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      Hack is my go to font as well, I’m sure part of that is due to it being well supported and easy to remember. Plus the lack of spaces in the name makes for less escape characters or quotes when defining it in config files.

      The small but critical feature I look for in a font is a clear differentiation between the characters I, l, and 1.

      • A_A@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        differentiation between the characters I, l, and 1. differentiation between the characters I, l, and 1.

        … and betweem “rn” and “m” ... and betweem "rn" and "m"

        • tun@lemm.ee
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          11 months ago

          I also try o, O, 0, *, {

          t, f, g, a, y, k, w, W to quickly check the styles

  • silas@programming.dev
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    11 months ago

    I love MonaLisa a lot. I’ve been using it for pretty much all monospace throughout my computer. It feels very fine-tuned and well thought out, and it’s very readable too.

  • DreamButt@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    I’m too old to die on any hills these days but mainly if it:

    • is mono spaced
    • doesn’t change characters to something other than what they literally are

    Then I’m happy

  • Pyro@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    Fira Code was my font of choice for a while, but now I use JetBrains Mono! Cascadia Code is also acceptable.

    • theherk@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      I can’t believe there isn’t more love for this here. I have used and loved many of the fonts here but Victor Mono is unparalleled in my view. Legible, open source, superb keming, cursive italics, ligatures or not, and very consistent across all faces. The champ in my book.

  • flubba86@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    I was using Inconsolata for about 5 years, then switched to Inconsolata-g when that came out, for another 5 years. But it’s a pretty old font and is TrueType and it’s hinting is bad, so doesn’t render well on Linux and it misses out on a lot of new font features.

    In 2019 I went hunting for a new favourite font, and tried out a whole bunch, giving each one a week in my IDE to really get to know it. During that time I realised I had a bunch of basic requirements for a font that some do better than others:

    • Similar characters should be distinct: eg, uppercase O and number 0. Uppercase I, lowercase l, and number 1. It’s weird how many popular coding fonts fail to make these clear.

    • Not too wide, and not too narrow. You’d think monospace fonts are all around the same size horizontally, but a standard 80-column slab of code can vary greatly in screen space width depending on the font, some are much too wide. Consolas is an example that is too wide. I like to have the option to tile three code panes side-by-side on a 1080P screen.

    • Easy to read. For some reason a lot of coding-specific fonts affect my ability to quickly and easily read the code, and some give me a headache.

    I realised that my use of Inconsolata for such a long time in the early stages of my career definitely shaped my preferences. I was looking for something similar to Inconsolata. That was when I discovered Fantasque Sans Mono. It’s a kind of weird looking font, maybe a bit too playful for a serious coding font, but I found I could read and parse code much faster (maybe it helps with mild dyslexia?), each letter is very distinct from every other. It has elements of handwriting, it has elements of a dyslexic font, it has similarities to Inconsolata.

    I’ve been using Fantasque (with Nerdfonts mixins) for 4 years now. Since then there has been a renaissance of code fonts, like Jet Brains Mono, and Fira Code. I like those, they are good fonts, but I keep going back to Fantasque, it feels so comfortable to use.

  • Albbi@lemmy.ca
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    11 months ago

    I’m trying out the new monaspace font. The variable width of wide letters is interesting and seamless, you don’t notice it happening.

    Before that, I was using monolisa.