Recs.
Updated
SpecsUpdate
Pros
Pro Available for Windows and OS X
The font is available on machines running Windows Vista, Windows 7, Windows 8, and Windows 8.1, as well as part of Microsoft Office 2007 and Microsoft Visual Studio 2010. Otherwise it can be downloaded from Microsoft's homepage. It can also be set up on OS X machines with instructions on how to do it available here.
Pro Includes true italics
There are true italics for this font, compared to obliques with most other monospaced fonts.
Pro Includes a large number of unicode ranges
Consolas supports 30+ unicode ranges including Greek, Cyrillic, and Thai for a total of 2735 glyphs.
Pro It reads so smooth
This font reads so smooth that it actually feels annoying to see it being treated as a programming font. For god's sake, don't treat it like a programming font, because this is the best general-use sans-serif font in my opinion. The humanist letterforms and the balanced monospace design are surely a great combination. Not to mention, unlike many other fonts, Consolas is the one to get character shapes "right". The "support bars" design on i and l allows for comfortable text reading unlike the abstract curvy design on some other monospaced fonts. And the r is also done properly, it curves all the way down.
Pro Supports patch that adds Powerline symbols
Consolas can be used with the vim plugin Powerline if the following patch is applied: Patch.
Cons
Con Not free
Consolas costs 129€ for personal use, but you can get it for free (as in beer) bundled with some free MS products (example).
Con Font size can't be changed gradually
Letter height is the same for 9 and 10, and for 11 and 12 pt. When switching from 10 to 11 pt, letter height changes abruptly (whereas line height changes gradually). This makes it impossible to choose exact letter height on a standard display. Size can't be set to 10.5 pt, for example.
Con Italic font is very different
The italic font (often used for comments) feels jarringly different to the regular one - especially on the "g" and "f" and "l" (lowercase L) glyphs.
Con Small 'L' is too similar to digit 1
You can tell the difference when they are close together, but when used apart, it can be a bit hard.
Con Highly aliased with ClearType
Consolas is specifically designed to work with ClearType antialiasing, so it becomes highly aliased when ClearType is not turned on. This can be alleviated to a degree with any basic grayscale anti-aliasing.
As an OpenType relative of Consolas, Inconsolata works well without ClearType (Inconsolata-g being the most popular variant).
Recommendations
Comments
Flagged Pros + Cons
Con Design flaws that I fixed in Consolas 8.1
Luc(as) de Groot designed Consolas, up to version 7.0. I updated it to 8.1 and it's available on https://typedesign.netlify.com/consolas.html , fixing many design flaws.
- The number sign (#) has that weird slant to it
- The tilde (~) is not the same as the tilde accent (˜)
- The MINUS SIGN (−) is not the same as the minus (-)
- The italic is terrible. Its distorted letterforms are a pain to read.
- The character set is messed up. There are 2400 characters. Only 1193 are necessary, yet at the same time many of the 1193 characters are missing!
- Some of the line-drawing characters (╒, ╞, ╓, etc.) have gaps in them
- The hinting renders badly outside of ClearType. Slightly improved rendering in ClearType but much enworsed outside of ClearType is an unacceptable tradeoff for the general community.
- The license and pricing of it is just fraud. Anyone can and will pirate this off the Internet.
- God. No. OpenType digit styles and such, NO. Pointless!
- The pilcrow sign (¶) is weirdly shaped.
- The size of the registered sign (®) is glitchy.
- The fraction slash (⁄) and the division slash (∕) have an ugly shape and the glyph of the regular slash (/) would be more appropriate.
ALL of those design flaws are fixed in Consolas 8.1: https://typedesign.netlify.com/consolas.html