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The following table describes the options which affect the output file(s) Fontconvert writes. You can specify as many as you like. If you don't specify any, the default is to write nothing at all.
In the following, font-name stands for the root part of the main input file (see section 3.3.1 The main input file). The output filenames here are the defaults; you can override them with the `-output-file' option (see section 8.1.5 Miscellaneous options).
This is mainly useful in conjunction with options that change the characters in the input font in some way.
If an existing TFM file is found, then Fontconvert uses it (by default) for the TFM header information, and for the ligature and kern information. Unless the `-baseline-adjust', `-column-split', filtering, or randomizing options were specified, Fontconvert also uses it for the character dimensions. (Those options radically change the appearance and size of the characters, so using the dimensions of the originals would be inappropriate.)
See section 8.1.4 Fontwide information options, for how to specify the global TFM information yourself, overriding the default.
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