25 comments

  • alberth 8 minutes ago
    Title: "a typeface for developers"

    > and now we're happy to expand the typeface with a new family called MonoLisa Text. The reasoning was to cover other use cases beyond coding with this proportional font.

    Dumb question, when should a developer not use a monospaced font? I.e. when should they use MonaLisa Text

    I'm sure I'm missing the obvious, but it is purely for LLM output use cases as the website implies (in which case why isn't Claude approach of using a serif font a better strategy).

    Please don't take my comments are negative. Just genuinely curious, which is why I'm asking.

  • efficax 2 hours ago
    $149 for a font for personal computer use is kind of steep! I would pay $20 for this, but the value has to be pretty high to pay $149 when there's a huge selection of free fonts on nerdfonts.com, of which many are pretty great. Like what does this font really offer that makes it so pricey?
  • cyphar 20 hours ago
    I'm more of a bitmap font guy (at least, as long as my eyes continue to forgive me for it) but I'm always interested to see what other fonts there are around. It does look quite nice.

    I must admit when I ran across the second real paragraph from the main page, I couldn't help but only think more and more about how we will look back on marketing copy like this in a decade from now:

    AI assistants produce both code and prose. MonoLisa Text renders long-form explanations with optimal readability, while MonoLisa Code keeps your code crystal clear. The perfect pairing for the AI era. (Under the title "A perfect pairing for the AI era.")

    Ignoring the deep pit of sadness I felt when thinking about the incredibly long (and revolutionary) history of typefaces that led us to today for just a moment, I'm honestly curious how effective this marketing is. How many people would assume a font would be suitable for general text but not LLM-generated text and would need to be dissuaded from that notion? I wonder if someone has started selling keyboards that are "perfect for prompting" (but I'm too scared to look at this stage).

    • applfanboysbgon 3 hours ago
      > I wonder if someone has started selling keyboards that are "perfect for prompting"

      I don't know about such marketing copy, but keyboards with a "CoPilot key" are now standard, particularly on all Windows laptops, which is an even more egregious form of marketing.

      • neonstatic 2 hours ago
        The "Windows laptop special key" is a bit of a meme. Microsoft keeps changing it every few years to the new hot thing and it never catches on. It feels like "we have Command key at home".
        • applfanboysbgon 2 hours ago
          I have never seen a Windows laptop with the right ctrl key, or any normal key, replaced by a special key before CoPilot. I have six Windows laptops spread over 20 years and all of them before my most recent one have normal keys.
    • a96 10 hours ago
      I think a lot of people might be excited by a typeface or other text system that would highlight tells of LLM "tainted" text.
  • microflash 7 hours ago
    Looks interesting.

    > The Licensee may not modify, translate, adapt, alter, decompile, disassemble, decrypt, reverse engineer, change or alter the embedding bits, the font name, legal notices contained in the font software, nor seek to discover the source code of the font data, convert into another font format, create bitmaps, add or subtract any glyphs, symbols or accents, or any other derivative works based on the electronic data in this product.

    This is why I haven’t bought it. I like to subset fonts to reduce the size. Any font license that prohibits this just gets ignored by me, no matter how good it is.

  • smcleod 7 hours ago
    Looks decent but $250 AUD for a font? Even for local and personal use? That's... a lot. I was thinking if it is paid and it was around $25 I'd consider it, then I saw the price!
    • hootz 3 hours ago
      Yeah, I've read the entire website, but I still don't understand how a font for programming can be worth that much.
      • applfanboysbgon 3 hours ago
        It's something you'll be looking at for perhaps 8 hours a day for years. If you actually use it, a font is easily worth that much, even disregarding its potential use in a commercial product.

        Of course, like open source software, free fonts do their best to undercut the market for individual professionals to make a living, but creating fonts isn't free.

        • pixlmint 2 hours ago
          JetBrains Mono does make it very hard to justify spending anything more than nothing on a good font though.
        • rhaps0dy 2 hours ago
          I can't figure out why this font is better than DejaVu Mono, or Monaco (mac). They all look basically the same to me. I actually would love someone to explain what the difference/improvement is, in other parts of life I know subtle changes add up.
        • fluoridation 2 hours ago
          >It's something you'll be looking at for perhaps 8 hours a day for years. If you actually use it, a font is easily worth that much

          I mean, what are you comparing against? Rendering text in the null font? Sure, if that's really all you have then I guess spend $250 on an actual font, but even VGA is perfectly serviceable for a lot of tasks, and I'm not sure this font is $250 better than VGA, let alone something like DejaVu or what have you.

          >creating fonts isn't free

          At this point we should ask if it was necessary to create another font in the first place.

          • applfanboysbgon 2 hours ago
            > I mean, what are you comparing against? Rendering text in the null font?

            No, I'm comparing against "whatever the default is". It's the same with chairs or beds. You can get "something to sit on" or "something to lay on" for $0 or close to it. But I will gladly pay a premium for the same reason - I spend 8+ hours a day in a chair, and 8+ hours a day in bed, so I don't even blink at paying any price to improve my daily QOL for years to come. Even if it's only by a little bit, a little bit of QOL over thousands of hours is an investment in your own happiness.

            > At this point we should ask if it was necessary to create another font in the first place.

            There's plenty of room for more fonts to exist. I have yet to find a monospaced coding font I like with Japanese support, and would gladly pay $250 if I found one.

            • fluoridation 2 hours ago
              Eh. To each his own. If it's about making improvements, I'm sure I could think of something to spend $250 on that would be more effective than a font, speaking for myself. There is such a thing as good enough, for me.
  • pmontra 4 hours ago
    > MonoLisa ships as a variable font with two axes. Weight gives you every cut from Thin to Black in a single file — no megabytes per style. Grade fine-tunes typographic color by adjusting stroke thickness without changing glyph widths

    If any web page designer reads this, weight 1 and grade -50 is what many web pages look like, or even thinner than that. Weight 300 and grade 0 are the lower boundary of readability IMO.

    A free (as money) font with most of those properties is Atkinson Hyperlegible Next, both monospace and variable width. https://www.brailleinstitute.org/freefont/

  • PufPufPuf 4 minutes ago
    Umm... Who would pay $149 to use a font? Maybe I'm not enough of a typography nerd, but I find the free choices (JetBrains Mono, Iosevka, Fira Code, ...) quite enough.
  • jvican 1 hour ago
    Similar to Input Mono font, which is superior to Monolisa in pretty much any way I can think of, plus free. https://input.djr.com/
    • earthnail 54 minutes ago
      I find them quite different, to be honest. I would not call them similar at all apart from being in the same design space of fonts for displaying code.
  • layer8 2 hours ago
    Regarding coding, the characters “:={” are all vertically centered differently.
  • warpspin 10 hours ago
    Seems there's no way to disable the <= ligature without disabling whitespace ligatures? I'm not all too crazy for real ligatures but whitespace adjustments otherwise seem nice.

    Also, as it's so finely adjustable, would love if they'd offer some variants for dot and comma, to increase their size, because that's my number one problem with fonts since age 45.

  • roundcan7998 1 day ago
    Created an account, to come tell you folk, just how much I love Monolisa. Have been using it every since they launched, in both my terminal, and my code editors.

    It’s lovely!

    editing to add: They even have PPP pricing! Which as someone living in India, I highly appreciate, since it puts a lovely piece of art within reach.

    • littlecranky67 14 hours ago
      I'm in spain using DIGI (a romanian telco) - their geolocation puts me into romania and offer a 40% discount.

      Anyway, still not going to pay 75€+ for a font.

    • nitinreddy88 19 hours ago
      20k (30$) for font for someone living in India is too much to ask.
      • yougotwill 17 hours ago
        It looks like they do pricing parity for different countries. Being in South Africa it shows a 40% discount available.
  • gregrobson 2 days ago
    Bought MonoLisa back in 2022, never even considered switching coding typeface since. Before that time I used to switch every 3-6 months.

    It's really well balanced easy on the eye.

  • Amekedl 13 hours ago
    Looks good. Won't ever buy a font though.
  • microtonal 2 hours ago
    I have used MonoLisa for a few years now as my terminal and editor font and I absolutely love it. It was a fair bit cheaper when I bought it (80 Euro IIRC), but was well-worth it!
  • groos 4 hours ago
    I call all these new fonts monofonts, mono in the sense of monoculture. Aesthetics practically indistinguishable from each other. Give me one of the IBM Selectric fonts in a modern form and I'll be happy as a clam.
    • charlesrice 52 minutes ago
      https://www.codingfont.com/ is a fun way to compare fonts side by side and see just how similar some of them really are. Also kind of fun to see if your favorite font makes it through a blind comparison bracket.
  • oneseven 1 hour ago
    I can't figure this out from the website, does the text variant have tabular figures?
  • steinvakt2 3 hours ago
    Is it possible to get this for free? I know there’s a free option but I don’t understand what the limits are
    • bebraw 3 hours ago
      The free trial version has a couple of fixed weights to try. It's missing all the advanced features (variable weight etc.) but it's enough to get an impression and to use it on a daily basis to see if you like it.
  • melody_calling 1 day ago
    I adore MonoLisa, thank you for all the effort that's gone into making it and congratulations on the new release!
  • veidr 2 days ago
    I love this font. I think it is probably the only coding font I have ever actually purchased.
    • geis 2 days ago
      Same! It's also one of my favorite UNIX puns (up there with pine).
  • SpyCoder77 20 hours ago
    Absolutely amazing name.
  • rirze 3 hours ago
    Look nice but super expensive for the normal developer. Good luck with the monetization, hope you get some company customers.
  • pentacrypt 8 hours ago
    Looks lovely!
  • sealedmailuk 1 day ago
    [dead]
  • dvt 1 hour ago
    In a world where Fira Code, Hack, JetBrains Mono, and like a zillion others (of equal, if not greater, quality) are offered for free, this is obviously a pure marketing play and it's sad we live in a world where even fucking fonts are so heavily monetized.