On 2017-09-20 05:37, Felix Miata wrote:
Mark Hounschell composed on 2017-09-19 14:01 (UTC-0400):
Carlos E. R. wrote:
David C. Rankin wrote:
From my comparison, it is just a slightly lighter variant of DejaVu Sans Mono.
I wonder how our font settings differ? I find the differences between Hack and DVSM minimal, and nothing to do with stroke weight. "i" is different, and "0' is different. That's all I see. With such trivial differences I wonder why anyone bothered to create or package Hack. :-p
Well, for coding, differentiating i, l, and 1, is important.
I see there that the hack font is certainly thicker than dejavu sans mono. I also notice "Source Code Pro". I like it.
Not a bad font. I could see using it depending on the LCD and freetype hinting available.
I tried a few fonts for my little coding, but there are so many fonts to choose from, that it is difficult.
Without a convenient extended side-by-side or over/under comparison mechanism I don't know how people can make an reasoned choice other than just using the default.
Right. But what I mean is that it is impossible to choose a font in, say, LO, because the drop list is infinite! Many of the choices I think are useless, just games. It would be preferable to have a dialog with filters for criteria, and obtain then the matching drop list.
Looking at Lazarus, I see mine is using:
-adobe-courier-medium-r-normal-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-iso10646-1
I'll try "hack" now.
[...]
The first thing I notice is that it is bigger, thicker. It is using size 10, I change to 9... I'm not sure I like the result, with thick strokes a small font doesn't look that right. I'll have to try more.
Courier was nice back when the LaserJet was a brand new product in 1984. That font managed to functionally disappear. Since the following decade or so the only common monospace font I like less than Courier or Courier New at any given actual physical size is Nimbus Mono L, an apparent Courier clone.
I needed, IIRC, to have a fixed font that was not to big and easily readable at small sizes. Ie, lot of content in a single page, and easy to read.
Take a look at that URL above and http://fm.no-ip.com/Auth/Font/fonts-comps-linuxmonoFate.html and http://fm.no-ip.com/Auth/Font/fonts-comps-linuxmono.html and you might find a face you like better than you thought, or one that you hadn't even thought about.
I have set now "Source Code Pro", but I have to actually try it for a bit and see how it fills. Thanks :-) Suggestion for your page: Have the font name at the left, and always with the same font. At the right have a comparison text. Similar to what you do on your first link, for instance. having the font name using always the same font makes easier to find a font name in the list.
You should try the misc-console-font.
Ugh! It annoys me that this (disliked; hard-dependency that blocks other updates if zypper locked) keeps getting rebuilt and re-updated. I only ever use it until I remember it's the default in Konsole3 and change it to use the system monospace, which I set globally to Droid Sans Mono.
The long standing openSUSE global setting to prefer the significantly smaller (at any given px size) than average (Vista; non-FOSS) Consolas to all other monospace, including the relatively newly determined openSUSE "optimal" Source Code Pro, is sad. Consolas is very annoying, as when installed, it makes an overabundance of monospace web fonts ever smaller still than the typically smaller than proportional size that browser settings default to.
I don't remember what setting I did... -- Cheers / Saludos, Carlos E. R. (from 42.2 x86_64 "Malachite" at Telcontar)