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What fonts does stack overflow use? Why were they chosen?

I find that there is often a lot of thought put into things like this, which is why I ask.

2 Answers 2

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Let's go meta, on meta. Development tools tell all:

In Chrome

  1. Right click on a word
  2. Click "Inspect element".
  3. Make sure "Show inherited properties" is checked.

Development tools

font-family: 'Helvetica Neue', Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;
font-kerning: auto;
font-size: 24px;
font-stretch: normal;
font-style: normal;
font-variant: normal;
font-variant-ligatures: normal;
font-weight: normal;
12

What Evan Carroll said. But this is not easy for a layman. So I suggest an alternative here. There's an extension for Chrome called WhatFont, which makes things easier.

WhatFont

What is the easiest way to find out the fonts used in a webpage? Firebug and Webkit Inspector are easy enough to use for developers. However, for others, this should not be necessary. With this extension, you could inspect web fonts by just hovering on them. It is that simple and elegant.

It also detects the services used for serving the web fonts. Supports Typekit and Google Font API.

Recommended by Wired WebMonkey, Lifehacker, and SwissMiss.

3
  • 5
    Good thing Stack Overflow is not made for laymen but for professional and enthusiast programmers :-) Commented Apr 27, 2016 at 12:01
  • 8
    @EvanCarroll Well.. Thanks. Not everyone googling "what fonts do a website use" follow the developer-level steps. I just thought I could help those laymen, not that I am one, btw. :) Also, if you read my earlier comments, you'll know that I already agree mine is inferior.
    – NVZ
    Commented May 24, 2016 at 16:36
  • 1
    I would advise against this, unless you trust chengyinliu.com to read and change all your data one very website. With a project that doesn't have a public source repo that I see. the repo link on chengyinliu.com/whatfont.html to github.com/willow/WhatFont-Bookmarklet is broke Commented Oct 18, 2023 at 16:42

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