Coding Font by Typogram – Find Your True Love of Coding Fonts(codingfont.com) |
Coding Font by Typogram – Find Your True Love of Coding Fonts(codingfont.com) |
If you use Google fonts or webfonts or something for this to be easier, I also have it as a webfont on my GitHub.
Out of curiosity, what options do you use? I might wanna try some.
Here are the options I currently use: https://www.jonashietala.se/iosevka/
Before seeing the actual content I’m presented 3 ways to bounce to another domain, and no obvious way to actually see the content.
Oh, and it’s back on every refresh.
The idea is great, thanks for sharing! But att I don't feel it provides enough sample data to really make an informed decision.
So I always end up using two browser windows of https://www.programmingfonts.org/ side-by-side for comparisons.
My top ranked font contains a significant issue (0's that look like O's); it would be useful to be able to go through "next best" etc. in cases like these.
It's one of those things that absolutely ruin my productivity and makes me reconsider all the fonts I use in my whole system.
Anyway - thanks for the link, love it.
—JetBrains Mono is the font I find myself orbiting these days. And as far as I know it was made with good first principles in mind. I’m willing to call it objectively good.
As B612 was designed for aircraft cockpit displays, I wonder if the brackets are squared like that to ensure “()” won’t be mistaken for “O” or “(“ for “C”?
When the work environment involves glancing at and scanning flight related data in a multi-screen cockpit, I can imagine that clarifying that sort of ambiguity is more important than ensuring brackets are immediately distinguishable – as opposed to what I’d want in programming.
> Source Code Pro
This, and Bitstream Vera Mono, has been my font for a long time, but recently I've been experimenting with Monaspace, MartianMono, CommitMono, and Comic Mono.
Very nicely done though, thank you!