A while ago, I wrote a user script to replace hyphens in front of negative scores with minus signs. It works pretty great: no perceptible slowdowns, no re-layouting or flickering, the minus signs show up instantly as if they were there from the beginning, even in dynamic content. The biggest drawback is that it kind of makes me cringe now every time I open Stack Exchange in a mobile browser, where I cannot install user scripts.
But honestly, I shouldn’t have had to do it. It would have been much more fitting to do it in the Stack Exchange software proper, where each place where a negative value may be displayed is easily found, instead of condemning authors of user script workarounds to playing scraping whack-a-mole.
It’s not the 1960s any more, where one had to squeeze distinct characters together to avoid running out of typewriter keys or code points in an 8-bit code page. Unicode exists now, support for it is ubiquitous, it has separate code points for each kind of horizontal line, so use them as intended! If Stack Exchange are so convinced that hyphens are superior to actual minus signs, why not remove the latter from the Achievements pop-up menu, where they appear without me having to install any user scripts?

Some have voiced the argument that screen readers may be unable to read minus signs correctly. I don’t find it particularly persuasive. If there are still any screen readers that are unable to recognise a real minus sign for what it is, they are broken and should be fixed instead of appeased, thereby perpetuating the vicious cycle of incompatibility (no author uses this, therefore no reader software supports this for lack of popularity, therefore no author uses this for fear of incompatibility, therefore…). In fact, it should be easier for screen readers to read a minus sign code point correctly, because its meaning is unambiguous; the reader software can avoid applying fallible heuristics to guess whether the -
character was meant as a hyphen, minus, or a dash. The speech synthesiser in my crappy 10-year-old Samsung phone that runs out of memory on a regular basis reads minus signs just fine. Are there really that many that can’t read them at all?
+
character to make it as narrow as the-
should work as well. Not so: the stem widths would be different.-10
is very clearly narrower than the+76
. Also, in most commonly used fonts, the digits are 'tabular lining', that is, they are all equal width, and the+
and minus are as well. The number of signs and the number of digits above and below are the same, so they should align. No need for monospaced text at all.