Favorite keyboard? Pfftcht, how about favorite font?

Findecanor

28 Apr 2011, 11:33

Windows' consolas has grown on me after I have used it more.

On keys, I think that smaller letters look better.

ripster

30 Apr 2011, 15:58

Somebody shoot Mozilla.

Firefox 4 W and V look like it's rendered by a kindergartner.
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webwit
Wild Duck

30 Apr 2011, 18:05

It doesn't use its own rendering but Windows rendering (which I presume you run), and that is different on other people's computers because you can adjust it to your liking (Control Panel -> Fonts -> Adjust ClearType). I heard people complain about too bold fonts, too thin fonts, etc., while you can adjust it yourself.

ripster

02 May 2011, 18:40

Well, it's better with ClearType tuning but something is definitely up with Firefox 4 and fonts.

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typhson

10 Jul 2012, 18:41

Font on the Choc Mini must be Arial?

For me it is awful in written text, but I think in single capital Letters on Keycaps it does look verry clean.
I like it, especially in these gold brown on dark brown Caps..

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rainb1ood

10 Jul 2012, 19:22


itlnstln

10 Jul 2012, 20:48

FireFox and IE9 use DirectWrite, not ClearType. DirectWrite is an abortion. In order to have IE9 and FF render "correctly," hardware acceleration needs to be turned off.

That's why I use Chrome. For added effect, I also use Mactype (a GL++ -like renderer): http://code.google.com/p/mactype/

BTW, my favorite font is Helvetica. Mactype renders Helvetica (and many other fonts) properly in Windows unlike ClearType.

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harrison

10 Jul 2012, 21:16

rainb1ood wrote:My new favorite, Roboto

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http://developer.android.com/design/sty ... raphy.html
Google took a LOT of flak from the font community regarding Roboto. I like the look of it as well, but the opinions about it out there are pretty aggressive.

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RC-1140

11 Jul 2012, 23:34

Sans-Serif:
DejaVu Sans
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Serif:
Computer Modern / Latin Modern
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Monospace:
Inconsolata-g
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sth
2 girls 1 cuprubber

12 Jul 2012, 06:17

sans: DIN Pro, Alte Haas Grotesk
serif/slabserif: Vitesse (slab), Sentinel (Hoefler is great!)
mono: Monaco 10 (mac default, got used to it and now I sorta like it), Liberation Sans Mono

ripster

12 Jul 2012, 07:14

typhson wrote:Font on the Choc Mini must be Arial?

For me it is awful in written text, but I think in single capital Letters on Keycaps it does look verry clean.
I like it, especially in these gold brown on dark brown Caps..
Yep Arial, it's all here:

http://geekhack.org/showthread.php?2817 ... nt-Lesson/

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TexasFlood

12 Jul 2012, 07:38

Really? Still posting geekhack links?

ripster

12 Jul 2012, 07:46

mkawa says GH will be up soon.

Don't you think it is Arial?

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TexasFlood

12 Jul 2012, 07:51

What, favorite? For me probably arial, or helvetica, for work stuff anyway.

ferociousfingerings

30 Sep 2012, 08:17

In accordance with this font-thread's obligatory 'comic sans' references, i shall share this comic-sans-related link.

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dirge

30 Sep 2012, 09:17

Courier :) vertically aligned for work, I do like some of the ones linked in here. May have to play around.

Biernot

01 Oct 2012, 00:21

Tahoma/8... without any antialiasing - die, blurry fonts, die. (http://www.sharpfonts.co.cc/ for Nobel Prize. :mrgreen:)

(Courier New is OK, too.)

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RC-1140

01 Oct 2012, 22:03

In the last time I slowly started to like Terminus, if I'm forced to work without a graphical environment. Otherwise I still prefer antialiased fonts.

I don't really like the Courier family, as I don't like looking on serifs. In print I prefer serifs though. But even then I don't like Courier…

Edit: D'oh! I like looking on serifs. I meant to say that I dislike them on LCDs.
Last edited by RC-1140 on 02 Oct 2012, 00:35, edited 1 time in total.

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Jim66

02 Oct 2012, 00:25

Courier New for me.

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HzFaq

02 Oct 2012, 10:02

Jim66 wrote:Courier New for me.
This, I'm a data admin and looking at anything in a font other then Courier New just automatically looks wrong.

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bhtooefr

02 Oct 2012, 14:18

Consolas and DejaVu Sans Mono/Menlo (Menlo being a fork of DVSM) are my favorite fixed-width typefaces.

Segoe UI is a nice UI typeface... although it's actually pretty meh on ClearType, even though it was DESIGNED for ClearType. Looks much better on an engine that goes for sub-pixel precision, like RISC OS or OS X's renderers, than on an exact pixel boundary renderer such as ClearType.

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ne0phyte
Toast.

29 Nov 2012, 10:01

To revive this thread..

My two favorite monospace fonts for programming are Envy Code R VS:
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and the Proggy programming fonts:
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bhtooefr

29 Nov 2012, 13:33

The problem with Envy Code R VS is the l/1 problem. Hard to tell at a quick glance, which is which.

(Still, otherwise a nice looking typeface.)

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ne0phyte
Toast.

29 Nov 2012, 14:24

I agree, but I never really had a problem with that. I usually don't have numbers and characters mixed (as variable, method or class name etc) so for me it doesn't matter.

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Daniel

29 Nov 2012, 18:45

I like the X11 core fonts (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fixed_%28typeface%29), in 6x13:
-Misc-Fixed-Medium-R-SemiCondensed--13-120-75-75-C-60-ISO8859-1

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typhson

29 Jan 2013, 21:42

Since today i was using courier new in my sourcecode editor.
I tried now the severels monospaced fonts mentioned here, and a few others, but after all I stucked on SourceCodePro:
SourceCodeSplash.png
SourceCodeSplash.png (38.32 KiB) Viewed 5532 times
It's not bitmaped, but verry smooth to read imo. I quote a developer of adobe, who tells about problems concerning
monospaced fonts (which are the same I had, and which SourceCodePro should't have that much) :geek:
To my eye, many existing monospaced font suffer from one of three problems. The first problem that I often notice is that, many monospaced fonts force lowercase letters with a very large x-height into a single width, resulting in overly condensed letter forms which result in words and text with a monotonous rhythm, which quickly becomes tedious for human eyes to process. The second problem is somewhat the opposite of the first: many monospaced fonts have lowercase letters that leave too much space in between letters, causing words and strings to not hold together. Lastly, there is a category of monospaced fonts whose details I find to be too fussy to really work well in coding applications where a programmer doesn’t want to be distracted by such things.

What else? Normal fonts: SourceSansPro is also smart, I think, but nothing special. However, I read today the first time about Roboto explicitly, I saw it here and there, and it was mentioned early in this thread, but i didn't notice it really :oops:
I like it too :thumbs

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Scheider

04 Feb 2013, 15:19

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bhtooefr

08 Sep 2013, 03:40

Bumping to note that I find I'm liking TI Uni a lot as a monospace font.

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Bundled with the tools for TI calculators. Looks better on OS X than Windows, but looks decent on Windows too.

mr_a500

08 Sep 2013, 04:59

Bah! I make my own fonts. I made fonts for Amiga, Mac OSX and even the fonts on my Sansa Clip+.

Yes, I'm a bit of a perfectionist freak.

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