Niche Nate: I am fascinated by (and often easily annoyed by) #fonts

- For digital, I prefer sans-serif fonts (serif is OK on printed materials)

- Even with sans-serif fonts, I prefer a "serif I" — I keep a document of "serif I" fonts I come across (screenshot)

- I am constantly taking notes — #ObsidianMD — both personal & professional, both for myself & for others, and I want them to be easily legible. I don't like confusion between a "capital I," a "lowercase l," and a "number 1" 😑

I also prefer fonts with a *complete* character set — so when I type something like ö or ø or æ, don't throw in some substitute font (or worse, the ⍰ because the font creator didn't address all symbols/characters).

@n8dunn

My favorite writing font is iA Writer Quattro. It’s draft font, not for final output, and has plenty of air around the punctuation like a mono font, making it easy to spot typos. It has all the special characters you mention, but doesn’t have a serif capital i. But iirc, iA Writer Duo does.

You might like Input Sans (free only for personal use). If you click on “Customize your download,” you can choose from alternate character styles and other variables. https://input.djr.com/download/

Input: Fonts for Code — Download

Input is a typeface for code, designed by David Jonathan Ross and released by Font Bureau.

@EpiphanicSynchronicity Yes, I've downloaded both of those. 🙂 For text, I prefer to avoid a monospace font, keeping that only for true code.

One of my current favorite fonts that checks a lot of my preference boxes is Readex Pro — https://fonts.google.com/specimen/Readex+Pro/about

Readex Pro - Google Fonts

Readex Pro is the world-script expansion of the Lexend fonts. Readex Pro is designed by Thomas Jockin and Nadine Chahine and currently supports Latin and Arabic

Google Fonts

@n8dunn

Neither iA Writer Quattro nor Input Sans is a monospace font. iA Writer Quattro has four widths so is nearly proportional, and Input Sans is fully proportional.

They just borrow some of the virtues of monospace fonts to facilitate writing and editing, but without the squashed letter forms and uneven spacing between characters you get with monospace.

@EpiphanicSynchronicity I’ll have to give them another look. Thanks for the clarification. 🙂