16

why did kotlin documents use these fucking idiotic font that combines 2 characters into one stupid looking icon? how is it friendly to a noob? how am i suppose to know how exactly am I suppose to input these piece of shit?

Comments
  • 4
    !=
    &&
  • 13
    These are font ligatures...

    https://github.com/tonsky/FiraCode

    You can find here some common ligatures and their replacements.

    But yes. Bad choice for documentation.... Not everyone likes it. It takes time to get used to it.
  • 10
    Realtalk, font ligatures fucking suck if you are used to classic fonts.
  • 19
    Docs shouldn't have ligatures, simple as that.
  • 4
    @PublicByte well I've also found out about font ligatures only couple months ago when Jetbrains released their new font which supports them.

    Honestly I don't like them mostly due to the fact they basically fool you on what you see. I can certainly see how this might be attractive if you're relatively new dev and/or have some non-dev background, but deffo agree with this rant, these shouldn't be pushed anywhere else except someone's private editor.

    Normal operators (as in non-transformed to ligatures) are standard in most if not all programming languages and using ligatures introduces unnecessary confusion for most of devs on places like code documentation.
  • 8
    @nitwhiz no, I loved them the first time I found out about them.

    They make it very much obvious what operation it is and I have switched every editor I have over to them.

    But I agree that it should be an active choice to use them, not default.
  • 2
    @myss "I can certainly see how this might be attractive if you're relatively new dev and/or have some non-dev background"

    Neither are true for me and I still like ligatures.
  • 0
    @VaderNT congrats, you belong to edge cases
  • 1
    @myss a lot of these I was using a life time ago in school.
    So to have fonts that use the same symbols I was using for math operators back then is more nostalgic then trendy for me.
  • 3
    > how exactly am I suppose to input these

    That's actually a fair point, you don't know that from the docs alone. You need an introduction to the language's syntax first. Which you need anyway to work with any language so... 🤷‍♂️
  • 3
    @myss I don't mind being an edge case. In an older version of this comment I asked you to back that up with numbers. It doesn't matter though.

    Your original point was you see utility for new devs or non-dev people. From the comments here you see ligatures are useful for a much wider range of people. Congrats, your horizon was broadened, that's what I truly care about. Forget those numbers.
  • 0
    I think it'd be quite easy to substitute the font for something else using Stylish.
  • 0
    Also, I think they are kinda advertising Jetbrains Mono here with flashy ligatures.
  • 2
    Here comes the popcorn seller.
  • 1
    I wanted to help, but I see that they managed without me
  • 2
    I already got used to firacode, I have it on all of my IDEs. It's a pleasure to my eyes 😌
  • 0
    I don't think the ligatures are the most hideous parts of FiraCode!

    I do think ligatures makes it far to difficult to see the difference between =, ==, and === at a glance and with many errors in popular languages being a result of mixing those up, that's just silly to me.
    Also reading from the ligature which character to change for the operator to change is a little less obvious, especially if you're new to a language or syntax.
  • 2
    You whipper snappers with your fancy pants fonts! You get all these wow shebang new toys and then complain when you don't get boolean logic. C/C++ is hard wahhhhhhh! Damn cry babies! ;-)
  • 1
    Ligatures are cool and I love them but they don't belong in documentation
  • 1
    Maybe it’s snobby but I immediately lose like 50% of the respect I have for a fellow coder if I see him or her use font ligatures. I don’t have a good reason for doing so.
  • 2
    @sawmurai That seems kinda snobby yes.
Add Comment