Introducing
The Slant team built an AI & it’s awesome
Find the best product instantly
Add to Chrome
Add to Edge
Add to Firefox
Add to Opera
Add to Brave
Add to Safari
Try it now
4.7 star rating
0
What is the best alternative to Native?
Ad
Ad
Operator Mono
All
7
Experiences
Pros
4
Cons
2
Specs
Top
Pro
Has a script version
Operator can be used to mix the same font for syntax formatting.
See More
Top
Con
Relatively expensive
At $179, this font is on the more expensive side.
See More
Top
Pro
Super readable
Long strings can be read in Operator exceedingly easily. The font just flows nicely, with all the benefits of clarity that provides.
See More
Top
Con
Roman style isn’t very appealing
See More
Top
Pro
Horizontal width not as wide as other fixed width fonts
You can legibly read everything and get more characters per line.
See More
Top
Pro
Adorable italics
See More
Specs
Zero Style:
Slash
Hide
See All
Experiences
$199+
65
15
M+ 1 Code
All
9
Experiences
Pros
6
Cons
2
Specs
Top
Pro
Permissive free software licence
This is a non-copyleft license that has minimal requirements regarding redistribution of the software.
See More
Top
Con
Top narrow
See More
Top
Pro
Narrow font is great for teaching
M+ 1m allows you to fit much more code on slides yet still have them be highly legible, making it a great choice for teaching.
See More
Top
Con
Certain pseudo-graphic characters take two spaces
In this font, some pseudo-graphic characters can take up two spaces instead of one.
See More
Top
Pro
17 different character-encodings available
ISO-8859-1, Latin-1 Western European ISO-8859-2, Latin-2 Central European ISO-8859-3, Latin-3 South European ISO-8859-4, Latin-4 North European ISO-8859-5, Latin/Cyrillic ISO-8859-7, Latin/Greek ISO-8859-8, Latin/Hebrew ISO-8859-9, Latin-5 Turkish ISO-8859-10, Latin-6 Nordic ISO-8859-13, Latin-7 Baltic Rim ISO-8859-14, Latin-8 Celtic ISO-8859-15, Latin-9 A revision of 8859-1 ISO-8859-16, Latin-10 South-Eastern European T1 Encoding, Default 8-bit encoding in many TeX installations Windows-1252, Used by default in the legacy components of MS Windows WGL4, Pan-European character set defined by Microsoft VISCII, Vietnamese standard character set
See More
Top
Pro
Five weights from Thin to Bold
The five font weights available are thin, light, regular, medium, and bold.
See More
Top
Pro
Works well with Japanese
The widths are half that of the Japanese characters in the font.
See More
Top
Pro
High legibility
M+ M Type-1 (1M) was created to emphasize the balance of natural letterform and high legibility.
See More
Specs
License:
OFL-1.1
Italics:
No
Weights:
7 (Thin, Extralight, Light, Regular, Medium, Semibold, Bold)
Zero Style:
Dot
See All Specs
Hide
See All
Experiences
FREE
83
11
Google Noto Sans Mono
All
6
Experiences
Pros
1
Cons
4
Specs
Top
Con
Zero is difficult to identify
As it's not dotted or slashed, "0" is more difficult to distinguish.
See More
Top
Pro
Excellent support for Unicode characters
Unicode uses 16 bits per character, meaning that it can represent more than 65,000 unique characters.
See More
Top
Con
Non-monospace ligature replacements for 'fl', 'fi', 'ffl', 'ffi'
By default, the substrings 'fl', 'fi', 'ffl', and 'ffi' are each crammed into one character width, making it not a truly monospace font. For example, the word 'flag' is rendered as three characters wide.
See More
Top
Con
Letters capital 'i' and lowercase 'L' are too similar
The only difference is almost unnoticable.
See More
Top
Con
Difficult to distinguish between a period and acomma as well as a colon and a semi-colon
Comma has very small tail, making it difficult to distinguish from a period (full stop). Same applies to colon and semi-colon.
See More
Specs
License:
OFL-1.1
Based On:
Google Droid Sans Mono
Zero Style:
Slash
Ligatures:
No
Hide
Free
7
2
Courier Prime Code
All
5
Experiences
Pros
2
Cons
2
Specs
Top
Con
Courier Prime Code 0 (zero) is distinct from uppercase O (Oh)
In the other style, Courier Prime, the 0 (zero) is not distinct from uppercase O (Oh).
See More
Top
Pro
Even spacing
Courier Prime Code is a monospace font with adjusted Line Height.
See More
Top
Con
1 (one) and lower l (ell) are very similar and can be confused
See More
Top
Pro
Support for standard font weights
Courier Prime supports Bold, Italics, Bold Italics, and Regular font weights.
See More
Specs
License:
OFL-1.1
Zero Style:
Dot
Ligatures:
No
Hide
Free
2
1
Berkeley Mono
All
4
Experiences
Pros
2
Cons
1
Specs
Top
Pro
Plain enough
The font does not distract you with weird glyphs – but is interesting enough to be loved.
See More
Top
Con
Missing weights
The regular weight is a little bit light for me, I'm waiting for the medium weight.
See More
Top
Pro
Legible
The font is wide enough to be legible but not too much so you can actually fit some information on your screen.
See More
Specs
License:
Proprietary
Italics:
Yes
Weights:
2 (Regular, Bold)
Zero Style:
Custom
See All Specs
Hide
$29.50+
7
0
Inconsolata
All
9
Experiences
Pros
7
Cons
1
Specs
Top
Pro
Characters readable even at small sizes
The characters in Inconsolata have a slightly "wide" appearance that aids in readability, especially at small font sizes.
See More
Top
Con
Arched braces
Too much arched braces, decreases clarity, touching characters almost.
See More
Top
Pro
Excellent readability
Very clear, distinct characters with decent spacing make Inconsolata very readable.
See More
Top
Pro
Efficient scalability
Inconsolata scales well without loss of readability.
See More
Top
Pro
Slashed zero characters are distinguishable from capital "O" and "Q" characters
Inconsolata-g screws this up by replacing the slashed zero with a dotted zero. A dotted zero is better than a zero with nothing in it, but worse than a slashed zero.
See More
Top
Pro
Open source
It's an open source font, meaning it's freely available.
See More
Top
Pro
No visible character breaks
Inconsolata renders lines in TUIs without visible character breaks; apparently unlike Inconsolata-g.
See More
Top
Pro
Widely available
Inconsolata is available in the package managers of almost every open source OS.
See More
Specs
License:
OFL-1.1
Italics:
No
Zero Style:
Slash
Ligatures:
Yes, but disabled by default
Hide
See All
Experiences
free
28
1
MonoLisa
All
11
Experiences
Pros
8
Cons
2
Specs
Top
Con
Not free
This font requires a purchase in order to be used. The cheapest version ('Basic') is 60 dollars. There is a free trial, though.
See More
Top
Pro
Customizable OpenType features downloads
The website offers customizable downloads for editors that don't support OpenType features natively.
See More
Top
Con
Wider than usual
As it's wider, this means a short adjustment period may be required. If you have a limited amount of horizontal space, the wider glyphs may be problematic as well.
See More
Top
Pro
Script variant
It comes with script variant for italics.
See More
Top
Pro
Ligatures
The typeface supports over 120 optionally enabled ligatures for common coding tasks.
See More
Top
Pro
Italics
The typeface comes with an italic version.
See More
Top
Pro
Space
Space used by the characters has been carefully balanced to keep them light to read.
See More
Top
Pro
Reading flow
The characters have been designed to flow into each other so that the font feels easy to read.
See More
Top
Pro
Distinction
Specific care has been put to make programming characters such as 1, i, and l or O or 0 easy to tell apart.
See More
Top
Pro
Wider than usual
As it's wider, this means there's more space for designing characters like "m".
See More
Specs
Zero Style:
Dot
Ligatures:
Yes
Hide
See All
Experiences
free / $59+
24
1
Bitstream Vera Sans Mono
All
8
Experiences
Pros
5
Cons
2
Specs
Top
Con
Line doesn't cover text right
When using Neomutt or htop, the line drawn over is too low - the top of the characters cut into the top of the line.
See More
Top
Pro
Compact
You can fit a lot of text on the screen.
See More
Top
Con
"mp" clump together with smaller sizes
E.g. in "The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog".
See More
Top
Pro
Font proportion is perfect
Width is just right (not too narrow, not too wide). Many other fonts lack this.
See More
Top
Pro
Smooth with antialiasing
Smooth at small sizes while still clear.
See More
Top
Pro
Readable at small sizes
All characters are easy to recognize at small sizes (comma, period, etc).
See More
Top
Pro
Easy to read
This is subjective but this font is very easy to read. The letters are all spaced and sized properly.
See More
Specs
License:
Bitstream-Vera
Italics:
Yes
Weights:
2 (Regular, Bold)
Zero Style:
Dot
See All Specs
Hide
See All
Experiences
Free
11
1
Office Code Pro
All
7
Experiences
Pros
4
Cons
2
Specs
Top
Pro
Modern and highly legible
The customizations were made specifically for text editors and coding environments, but are still very usable in other applications.
See More
Top
Con
Looks like something designed by Microsoft
See More
Top
Pro
Looks great
Sometimes it even works better than Source Code Pro for reading and writing.
See More
Top
Con
Does not have cyrillic characters
See More
Top
Pro
Works very well on Intelli J
This is useful for those who prefer using this environment.
See More
Top
Pro
Integrates Powerline glyphs
The author added Powerline glyphs in version 1.002.
See More
Specs
License:
OFL-1.1
Based On:
Adobe Source Code Pro
Zero Style:
Dot, Slash
Ligatures:
No
Hide
See All
Experiences
FREE
28
3
Google Noto
All
7
Experiences
Pros
5
Cons
1
Specs
Top
Pro
Optimized for a large variety of displays
Glyph design on Noto Sans is well designed and accounts for HiDPI and standard displays.
See More
Top
Con
Font pack might be too large
Because it is so comprehensive, the TTF/OTF packages in ZIP is really large.
See More
Top
Pro
Open-source
Licensed and distributed under the SIL Open Font License.
See More
Top
Pro
Retina-ready
Looks very clean and crisp on retina displays.
See More
Top
Pro
Simple and yet beautiful
Simple and beautiful - much like the Windows counterparts such as Calibri and Arial but it's native for Linux and for this reason it looks better than these two with anti-aliasing.
See More
Top
Pro
Expansive character set
Noto Sans is one of the most comprehensive fonts in the market, covering an estimated 30+ languages backed by Google.
See More
Specs
License:
OFL-1.1
Based On:
Google Droid Sans
Hide
See All
Experiences
FREE
67
6
Microsoft Verdana
All
6
Experiences
Pros
4
Cons
1
Specs
Top
Con
Not monospaced
-if that is an absolute must for you. But don't assume it is until you've tried without...
See More
Top
Pro
Free with Windows
See More
Top
Pro
Compact while light
Packs lots of information into your screen space while remaining clear and never looking crowded.
See More
Top
Pro
Renders perfectly at all sizes
Again, particularly in Windows
See More
Top
Pro
Looks absolutely gorgeous in Windows
Looks good elsewhere as well, but the world-class hinting here really comes out with the windows rasterizer (probably optimized for it).
See More
Specs
License:
Proprietary
Hide
$49+
23
3
Hack
All
13
Experiences
Pros
9
Cons
3
Specs
Top
Pro
Very readable
See More
Top
Con
No ligatures in the default font
Although patched versions with ligatures do exist - see here.
See More
Top
Pro
Libre webfonts are available in svg, eot, ttf, woff, and woff2 formats
Hack is free for unlimited commercial and non-commercial use. The webfonts are hinted (TrueType instruction set) to optimize display on the screen and are built into all commonly used web font formats with each new release. They include the complete release character set and smaller (filesize) basic Latin subset releases. They are available in the build directory of the repository.
See More
Top
Con
Sometimes difficult to distinguish lowercase "i" (eye) and lowercase "l" (ell)
When using a higher resolution monitor and a smaller font size, the lowercase "i" (eye) and lowercase "l" (ell) are very difficult to distinguish. The space between the dot and the remainder of the letter seems to somehow disappear, thereby making it look like a solid line, similar to the lowercase "l" (ell).
See More
Top
Pro
Fixes many readability issues in Vera/DejaVu
The tilde symbol ('~'), comma (',') and semicolon (';') glyphs have been modified to be more readable at small sizes and/or on non-HD displays. In addition, the underscore symbol ('_') has been slightly lifted for alignment with surrounding characters.
See More
Top
Con
Too similar to DejaVu
See this gif comparison between the two fonts.
See More
Top
Pro
Avaliable in many GNU/Linux distro package manager
Including Debian/Ubuntu (fonts-hack), Fedora (font-hack-ttf), OpenSUSE (hack-fonts), Arch (ttf-hack) and probably many more. Much nicer than having to manually install/update
See More
Top
Pro
Free/Open license
See More
Top
Pro
Renders accurately on Windows on all font sizes
See More
Top
Pro
Based on the tried and tested Bitstream Vera Sans Mono
The fonts are in the Vera Sans Mono lineage with a significant expansion of the character set (which includes Cyrillic and modern Greek character sets), new glyph shapes and modifications of the original glyph shapes, as well as improvements in metrics and hinting/TT instructions to make it more legible at small text sizes used for source code. The changelog is available here.
See More
Top
Pro
Powerline glyph patch is included
The regular set is patched with Powerline glyphs by default. There is no need to patch the font to use it in Powerline environments.
See More
Top
Pro
Source code is released in UFO format
UFO source format is widely supported by all modern font editors if you would like to modify the typeface.
See More
Specs
License:
MIT
Based On:
DejaVu Sans Mono
Weights:
2 (Regular, Bold)
Zero Style:
Dot
See All Specs
Hide
See All
Experiences
Free
300
27
Google Roboto Mono
All
14
Experiences
Pros
10
Cons
3
Specs
Top
Pro
Looks really beautiful
Roboto Mono has a very clean and beautiful design.
See More
Top
Con
Curly braces aren't very distinctive
The curly braces are too close to parentheses, which can harm readability for programming.
See More
Top
Pro
Clean and legible
Roboto Mono is crystal clear which makes it a good choice for reading code without your eyes getting tired.
See More
Top
Con
Not recognized as monospace font
Windows does not recognize the font as monospaced. Cannot be used as terminal font.
See More
Top
Pro
The right thickness
It's neither too thin, too fat, nor too condensed. Roboto Mono is just right.
See More
Top
Con
Sublime Text doesn't show italic version
font face "Roboto Mono" has different widths for italic characters, disabling to prevent text reflow
See More
Top
Pro
All variants available
Both bold and italics look great in Roboto Mono.
See More
Top
Pro
Distinctive uppercase vs lowercase characters
The median line is placed relatively low. This makes reading mix-cased words (eg. hashes) easier.
See More
Top
Pro
Readable, elegant and cute
It's very readable, elegant and cute. Almost indistinguishable with SF Mono at small point sizes. It looks great even as a display font.
See More
Top
Pro
Makes for an excellent font for terminal
Roboto Mono looks particularly well on iterm2.
See More
Top
Pro
Released under the lenient Apache License
See More
Top
Pro
Powerline Patched version works well
This is the only font that works well and looks good with agnoster theme and powerline for bash/zsh.
See More
Top
Pro
Looks great on HiDPI
Looks good at 14pt and lower, but looks great at 20pt and higher, making it an excellent font for higher resolutions
See More
Specs
License:
Apache-2.0
Zero Style:
Slash
Ligatures:
No
Hide
See All
Experiences
FREE
88
11
Dank Mono
All
6
Experiences
Pros
3
Cons
2
Specs
Top
Pro
Italic variant with handwriting style
See More
Top
Con
Too thin
He needs to add variants of thickness and then I think he would have a sellar product. You have to set your font size extremely high on hi-res displays to look the way I think he wishes it to be, but then the font is too large.
See More
Top
Pro
Has ligatures
See More
Top
Con
Looks a bit inconsistent, especially italics
Lowercase k looks weird.
See More
Top
Pro
Cheaper alternative to Operator Mono
Operator Mono costs about $200. Dank Mono looks similar but costs only £40.
See More
Specs
Zero Style:
Slash
Ligatures:
Yes
Hide
$28+
32
5
Input Mono
All
18
Experiences
Pros
8
Cons
9
Specs
Top
Pro
Highly configurable
Input can be configured online with preview: width, weight, line height, and alternate letterforms.
See More
Top
Con
Closed source
Although font designers need to make money too, open source model is preferred.
See More
Top
Pro
Available in Mono, Sans, and Serif
There are a couple advantages to using a proportionally spaced font in code: comfort of reading, ease of spotting typos, and better differentiation between different kinds of code with font styles. Fontbureau dedicated an entire page to this topic. Unfortunately, a lot of text editors only support monospaced fonts.
See More
Top
Con
No ligatures
This can be a pro or con depending on who you ask, but it would be nice to have the option.
See More
Top
Pro
Clear distinctions between similar characters
The font is easy to read, has a clear distinction between similar character types, is very customizable with weight and line height. Free for personal/unpublished usage. You can customize the font how you like it on their site before downloading it to use. In some fonts, it's difficult to distinguish between similar characters such as i/L/1, or o/zero, or m/rn. This font does an incredible job at making all of these examples clearly identifiable.
See More
Top
Con
In VS2017 this font does not work and displayed as "Courier New"
See More
Top
Pro
Clear on low resolution and retina display
The code stays clear on low resolution and retina display with the same font option.
See More
Top
Con
Hard to distinguish "8" from "B" at low sizes
This often impacts upon designers working with hexadecimal numbers. Many fonts address this by either changing the x-height for numerals, making "8" more of an hourglass shape, or making the "B" cap smaller. At 10 pt, there's less than three pixels of a difference (anti-aliased).
See More
Top
Pro
Large, obvious punctuation
See More
Top
Con
Gets the job done, but not rounded enough to be pleasant/easy on the eyes
See More
Top
Pro
Light, Extra-Light, Thin weights
The designer advises using a lighter weight for light-on-dark color schemes.
See More
Top
Con
Bold 5 and 6 are too similar
See More
Top
Pro
Serif font is remarkably readable
See More
Top
Con
Decimal digits can blend together in Mono variant
A lot of decimal digits have a similar form, 2's can sometimes look like 8's and so forth, which makes long strings of digits hard to read. I find other fonts like Consolas's digits more legible even at smaller sizes. In the proportional variants this is less a problem.
See More
Top
Pro
Condensed and Compressed Thin saves a lot of space
When using the condensed or compressed version with the thin typeface, you gain a lot of screen space and it's still extremely readable for all day coding.
See More
Top
Con
Easy to confuse lowercase "i" with "1" if you're not used to it
The dot is so close to the body that they fuse, and with the serif on top it looks like the cap of the letter "1". When you put them side by side it's easy to see which one is which, but if you see a code that reads "a+=i" you're going to read that it increments a by 1.
See More
Top
Con
The tilde is indistinguishable from a dash
Tilde is basically indistinguishable from a dash, unless you blow the size up huge. The curves in the tilde are too shallow.
See More
Specs
License:
Proprietary
Italics:
Yes
Weights:
7 (Thin, Extralight, Light, Regular, Medium, Bold, Black)
Zero Style:
Custom
See All Specs
Hide
See All
Experiences
Free / $5+
185
20
Terminus
All
9
Experiences
Pros
4
Cons
4
Specs
Top
Pro
Looks great even without anti-aliasing
Many fonts look terrible without anti-aliasing. Not Terminus, it looks clear and crisp.
See More
Top
Con
Italics are not very appealing
Italicized Terminus TTF doesn't appear as aesthetically pleasing as it was intended.
See More
Top
Pro
Beautiful crunch pixels
See More
Top
Con
It doesn't look very nice
See More
Top
Pro
Pixel-perfect rendering
No blurry characters ever. Every pixel on the screen is used to its full capacity.
See More
Top
Con
Square
See More
Top
Pro
Terminus is not going fat
Many fonts are fatty when they are used relatively large in size but Terminus does not have this issue. And now it works with IDEA.
See More
Top
Con
Easy to be confused with different brands of the same or similar name
Like Terminus (Russian production company), Terminus (terminal emulator) or Termius (SSH client).
See More
Specs
License:
OFL-1.1
Weights:
Regular, Bold
Zero Style:
Slash
Ligatures:
No
See All Specs
Hide
See All
Experiences
Free
165
20
Hermit
All
3
Experiences
Pros
2
Cons
1
Top
Con
Bold weight has larger width & height
Makes mixing bold/regular weight cause un-even spacing https://github.com/pcaro90/hermit/issues/5
See More
Top
Pro
Good design
The design of Hermit is clear and legible.
See More
Top
Pro
OFL licensed
This means that the font is free and open source.
See More
Hide
Get it
here
10
2
Dalton Maag Ubuntu Mono
All
13
Experiences
Pros
6
Cons
6
Specs
Top
Pro
Excellent readability
Line thickness, shape, and spacing help you to recognize characters and words correctly the first time through, without your eyes having to skip back and re-read.
See More
Top
Con
Lowercase "i" (eye) is tailed, and too similar to lowercase "l" (ell)
Same with Hack and Red Hat Mono.
See More
Top
Pro
Pleasant aesthetics
The font has a rounded, smooth aesthetic that is particularly appealing.
See More
Top
Con
Many characters seem imbalanced
Some of the characters don't feel like they match well which can be distracting.
See More
Top
Pro
Easily distinguishable characters
There are dotted zeroes in Ubuntu Mono so to distinguish from the letter "O" (Oh), while the lowercase letter "l" (ell) is very different from the number "1" (one).
See More
Top
Con
The font is too small
Ubuntu's 13pt looks like 10pt of another font.
See More
Top
Pro
Legible even at small sizes
The fonts retain legibility and under subpixel rendering at small sizes.
See More
Top
Con
Lowercase "m" is weird and stands out
The lowercase "m" in Ubuntu Mono really stands out because of its unusual shape, which disrupts the user's attention when reading.
See More
Top
Pro
Many languages
1,200 glyphs, 200-250 languages (native languages of 3 billion people).
See More
Top
Con
Dotted zero characters less distinguishable
Dotted zero characters are much less distinguishable than those that are slashed.
See More
Top
Pro
Open source font
SIL Open Font License.
See More
Top
Con
No support for combined unicode characters
For example, x̄ is rendered as x ̄.
See More
Specs
License:
Ubuntu Font 1.0
Weights:
2 (Regular, Bold)
Zero Style:
Dot
Ligatures:
No
See All Specs
Hide
See All
Experiences
Free
314
34
Monofur
All
5
Experiences
Pros
3
Cons
2
Top
Pro
It's simple, beautiful, and stylish
See More
Top
Con
Lacks bold+italic
Monofur has a regular italic and bold typeface, but it lacks bold+italic. Syntax-capable editors can better display code based on function/class/context/markup work when at least 4 families are available to display.
See More
Top
Pro
Great for your eyes
Monofur is very legible. Even after staring at it for hours, your eyes won't get tired.
See More
Top
Con
Only characters from the Western charset work in many Windows apps
The font includes all characters for all European languages; however, in most programs using Unicode (such as WordPad or MS Word), only languages using Western charset can use this font. These include English, German, French, Spanish, and Norwegian. Trying to use any languages like Czech, Hungarian (Central European), Bulgarian, Russian (Cyrillic), or Greek will make the font switch back to default font like Arial or Calibri, even though Monofur itself includes characters for those languages. Authors didn't bother fixing the non-working Baltic / Central European / Greek / Cyrillic / Turkish character set for those years.
See More
Top
Pro
Letterforms are highly distinct
The font is very legible due to the distinguished characters it contains.
See More
Hide
Get it
here
46
8
Sudo
All
5
Experiences
Pros
4
Specs
Top
Pro
Good legibility
Different character categories are differentiated by height and alignment. Numbers are a line width smaller than capital letters. Zero is now dotted.
See More
Top
Pro
Programming ligatures
See More
Top
Pro
Four styles available
Sudo has Regular, Italic, Bold, and Bold Italic styles available.
See More
Top
Pro
Works well on Windows
Sudo is hand-hinted for good rendering on Windows.
See More
Specs
License:
OFL-1.1
Italics:
Yes
Weights:
5 (Thin, Light, Regular, Medium, Bold)
Zero Style:
Dot
See All Specs
Hide
FREE
5
1
Built By the Slant team
Find the best product instantly.
4.7 star rating
Add to Chrome
Add to Edge
Add to Firefox
Add to Opera
Add to Brave
Add to Safari
Try it now - it's free
{}
undefined
url next
price drop