Template:Mxt/User CSS for a monospaced coding font

From Zoophilia Wiki
Revision as of 11:46, 5 January 2018 by meta>SMcCandlish (creating page)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigationJump to search

You can consistently use a monospaced font with well-designed characters for coding, e.g. to distinguish clearly between l, 1, and I).

Add something like one of the code snippets below into your Special:MyPage/common.css page, replacing "Roboto Mono" with whatever your preferred coding font is (Roboto Mono was picked as a freely-available coding font [1] for this example).

This code will do the following:

  • Apply a consistent monospace font of your choice (and the fallback system-default monospace, should that font go missing or not have characters you need) to all the classes used by {{mxt}} and other monospaced templates in the {{xt}} family, plus all the normally monospaced HTML elements like <code>, <pre>, etc.
  • Make the two most frequently encountered editing fields also use this font stack: the main editing window and the edit summary line.

If you know of an additional class to add here, please update this page or mention it on the talk page.

Horizontal style <syntaxhighlight lang="css">/* Use my font for code, when available, to save my eyes */ code, pre, samp, kbd, tt, .example-mono, .bad-example-mono, .neutral-example-mono, .deprecated-example-mono { font-family: "Roboto Mono", monospace !important; } /* Make some of the editable stuff monospaced */

  1. wpTextbox1, #wpSummary { font-family: "Roboto Mono", monospace !important; }</syntaxhighlight>

Vertical style <syntaxhighlight lang="css">/* Use my font for code, when available, to save my eyes */ code, pre, samp, kbd, tt, .example-mono, .bad-example-mono, .neutral-example-mono, .deprecated-example-mono {

 font-family: "Roboto Mono", monospace !important;

} /* Make some of the editable stuff monospaced */

  1. wpTextbox1,
  2. wpSummary {
 font-family: "Roboto Mono", monospace !important;

}</syntaxhighlight>

If you'd like to help clean up instances of the <tt>...</tt> element – which has not been valid HTML since the 1990s, and should usually be replaced with <code>...</code>, though this may vary by context) – you can add something like the following to your common.css to make <tt> stick out like a sore thumb:

<syntaxhighlight lang="css">/* Flag bad code for cleanup */ tt { color: DarkRed; background: Pink; }</syntaxhighlight>