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Comments and Discussions
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Some typefaces are OK at the sizes you present, but are unreadble at the 8-point I use.
Following the CP poll about fonts, I switched to Andale Mono.
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Agreed!!
If the size is not proper then the fonts look distorted and we got feeling that something is not fine.
Even when sometime vardana fonts looks fine with size 9 but looks clumsy when the size increases.
Believe Yourself™
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When programs need to display lots of data in a very small space, tiny fonts (e.g. in the range of 4x6 to 6x10) can be extremely useful. Unfortunately, .net does not allow the use of bitmap fonts in its controls, and all the TrueType fonts I've seen become illegible at such sizes.
Other than having a program manually draw characters as bitmap graphics, is there any good way to show data legibly at such sizes? For example, do there exist any TrueType fonts that scale well to such sizes, or is there any utility which can take a collection of bitmaps and produce a TrueType font which, when rendered at a particular size, will yield those bitmaps precisely?
Note that for legibility at 4x6, it's necessary that some font characters be rendered quite differently from how they would normally appear at larger sizes. An "N", for example, should appear as a taller version of "n".
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I suggest that you try ProFontWindows or one of the Proggy fonts.
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I'll give those a try. ProFontWindows brings back some memories, since I looked at ProFont in my Macintosh days and ended up creating something that was similar but a bit different. Most notably, the font I created made most of the lowercase letters four pixels wide instead of five and used a narrow zero instead of a slashed one. I actually replaced Monaco-9 with my own adaptation, so it would be the default monospaced system font.
Proggy-Tiny looks like it will be pretty good for use in a 6x9 character box. ProFont is unfortunately only a bitmap font, and thus is not usable in .net controls. Maybe I'll just have to kludge together some bitmap routines for use with a 4x6 character matrix.
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Akkurat looks pretty appealing, but $US150
I also tried some "programmer's" fonts but they are more stylish than readable, and for my taste Courier New lacks the vertical.
The CodeProject font top-list ranking is well-deserved, Consolas is really the best ClearType font (my thumbs-up) and Lucida Console is the best CRT display font.
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T800G wrote: Consolas is really the best
At what size? I can't read it at 8-point.
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Thankyou!
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Thanks, Proggy Clean is already in the list.
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General News Suggestion Question Bug Answer Joke Rant Admin
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This article presents commonly used programming fonts with examples of each font in ClearType and non-ClearType.
| Type | Article |
| Licence | CPOL |
| First Posted | 9 Oct 2008 |
| Views | 374,499 |
| Bookmarked | 139 times |
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