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Ask HN: Help me find the right font
32 points by kellishaver on Nov 25, 2009 | hide | past | favorite | 16 comments
I'm a web developer with a severe visual impairment. I'm legally blind. Until recently, I've been using a fairly standard (9pt) font size in my editor, because I liked having all of that space when writing code. However, it forced me to sit rather hunched over and close to the monitor in order to see it, which has started causing neck problems.

A simple solution is to bump up the font size (I already work on a 24in monitor). I can get used to not having as much real-estate to work with, but now I can't find a good monospaced font that looks decent at larger sizes (say, around 14pt). Everything I've tried either looks pixelated, which I find very distracting, or is still too thin to really be that much more legible to me.

I need a medium-weight, monospaced font that won't look terribly pixelated and jagged at larger sizes. Does such a font exist? Any suggestions?

Thanks!




Inconsolata is amazing. It looks amazing at larger sizes. Also it is free.

http://www.levien.com/type/myfonts/inconsolata.html


Alternatively, Consolas is really good (and free), especially on Windows with ClearType turned on. Looks pretty good to me at large sizes.

http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/details.aspx?familyid=22e...


Whoa, that looks great. Thank you so much!


I use Bitstream Vera Sans Mono at 12pt. It looks great.

Here it is at 14pt: http://i50.tinypic.com/2z7fmgn.png


Anonymous Pro is a lovely, free, monospaced font. http://www.ms-studio.com/FontSales/anonymouspro.html


Thanks, everyone, for the suggestions! You've helped me find some great fonts. I really appreciate it.

For those asking, I use TextMate on the macbook and I've been using Sublime in Windows.


If you're using TextMate, make sure you turn on anti-aliasing. That's probably why the fonts look pixelated at larger sizes. For what it's worth, I just use Monaco at 14pt with anti-aliasing.


I don't personally use this at a large size, but I have found that it looks pretty nice even when large. http://damieng.com/blog/2008/05/26/envy-code-r-preview-7-cod...

I hope you find something that suits you. Best of luck.


OK, HN is fast and awesome. Both of you have suggested great looking fonts that are far superior at the bigger size to the ones I've been using. Thanks a bunch!


I'm particularly fond of Monaco, the default font for Textmate (OS X). That being said, Textmate also supports anti-aliasing which might help solve this problem for you too.

What editor do you use?

Screen shot: http://img.skitch.com/20091125-riekchctmj7u1j812xdb6dqi28.pn...

Download: http://www.webdevkungfu.com/textmate-envy-aka-monaco-font-fo...


I know it's not what you asked, and I'm sure, given your situation, that you've already investigated your options, but you might take another pass at elevating your monitor.

My eyesight happens to be OK, but I overwork my eyes in a similiar manner - I crank the size down until I have a hard time reading it. I've found that having my monitors up higher encourages me to sit with the best possible posture. YMMV. Good luck.


Aside from the font you chooce, make sure to have ClearType on with Windows or Anti-aliasing on with OS X :)


I'm a big fan of dejavu sans mono. I often use it for demos in Terminal.app at huge sizes and it looks great.

http://dejavu-fonts.org/wiki/index.php?title=Download


Emboldening tends to improve readability too. If you're trying to optimise screen real-estate you might try a 2pt smaller font-size but use the bold/black/heavy version of the font.


Consalas.


Neep bold might be what you're looking for, but it could be too pixellated. http://www.jmknoble.net/fonts/

Here's an screenshot: http://grace.evergreen.edu/~nybnik10/files/neep_big.gif (I'm not sure if that's exactly 14pt, since it's not my pic).




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