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> Text editors use monospaced fonts!

> It doesn’t matter what editor you use. Vim, Emacs, TextMate, Sublime Text, Eclipse, Gedit, Notepad++? All of them use monospaced fonts.

No they don't. What silliness is this?

From the author's list, Sublime Text, Eclipse, Gedit, and Notepad++ all support proportional fonts.

Of the other editors I use frequently, Komodo IDE, Visual Studio, UltraEdit/UEStudio, XML Marker 2, and MarkdownPad among others all support proportional fonts.

So write in a monospaced font if that's what you prefer, but nobody is making you do it.



Do you use a proportional-width font for viewing code?


Yes I do, and greatly prefer it. Just as the written word is more readable in a proportional font, code is too. And more of it fits on the screen!

The only thing that doesn't work in a proportional font is column alignment tricks. (Basic indentation works fine.) That problem is easy to solve by not using column alignment at all. I find code easier to read and much easier to maintain when it doesn't use column alignment. When reading someone else's code that does use column alignment, I just switch to a monospaced font for that file.

I wrote on this at more length here:

http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=4625340

If you're heavy into column alignment styles as in the examples from that comment, then a proportional font won't be for you. But if not, give it a try. It may seem strange at first but give yourself a chance to get used to it. You may find you like it, and if not, no harm done.




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