What is your “basic” list of fonts every linux desktop user should install ?

11 points

Comic neue, must have for all the important legal documents.

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11 points
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Liberation fonts, Noto fonts, Deja Vu fonts and Nimbus fonts pretty much. Add in Cantarell too and you are set I would say. Those are the ones you should install for compatibility.

I always install Inter for UI and JetBrains Mono for terminal usage. I find they render way better than pretty much anything else.

Update: Discovered Geist and Geist Mono and they are amazing, I am going to replace Inter and JetBrains Mono from now on: github.com/vercel/geist-font

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11 points

For me personally, it’s Victor Mono and Iosevka. Victor Mono for desktop and Iosevka for VSCodium.

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4 points

Iosevka is so great. Not everyone likes the narrow look. I’ve tried other fonts a couple of times since I stumbled on it a good handfuls of years ago, but I always come back.

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1 point
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You can always compile your own Iosevka and adjust several pieces, I have done that selecting what I consider the best pieces a long time ago.

The compiled font lives in an easy to access internal webserver that I just grab from every computer I use (=

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2 points

I like both of those, but my terminal and coding are always in MPlus Code

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3 points

Nice! That font really looked nice through the smartphone. Will try it out in VSCodium when I can. Thanks!

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4 points

I love a good condensed font:

https://www.programmingfonts.org/#mplus

It doesn’t support ligatures though.

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2 points

Just looked at the screenshot on the Victor Mono page and the kerning makes me want to rip my eyes out…

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1 point

Why? 😄

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2 points

Not OP, but if you look at the Hello World code example, the “HelloWorld” class is visually divided at the l’s and the o and W are glued together. Looks more like “Hel l oWorld”.

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1 point
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10 points
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This isn’t specific to Linux necessarily, but the best free fonts I like the most that I always install regardless of OS are:

  • DejaVu (included by default in a lot of Linux distros but not in Windows)
  • EB Garamond (a font intended to replicate Garamond but with the Open Font License)
  • Inconsolata (a font intended to replicate Consolas but with the Open Font License)
  • Noto (also included by default on a lot of Linuxes but not on Windows)
  • Vollkorn
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4 points

Inconsolata is my ride or die font for programming.

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5 points

Same, love using it for terminal and vscode

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Yeah I fucking love that font. Better than Noto Mono because in Inconsolata the zeros have a cross through them and therefore it’s easier to distinguish them from the letter O.

The only downside is that it hasn’t been updated since 2015-12-04 and thus only has “the base ASCII set and … the Latin 1, 2, and 9 complements”. So it works for most English-speaking purposes, but runs into problems if you try to use certain symbols used outside of that context, like other languages or some special characters. I don’t run into it often enough to be too much of a problem, but it is there.

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2 points
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May I introduce you to Nerd fonts you can have your inconsolata and your symbols

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9 points

Computer Modern, the font of LaTeX

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