Those short names are (as detailed in xterm cannot load font) aliases for ISO-8859-1 fonts, which (unsuprisingly given the history of UTF-8) have the same appearance as the UTF-8 fonts. Just reading the XTerm app-defaults file, most users would not notice that the non-UTF-8 fonts given here look something like the UTF-8 fonts: *VT100.font1: nil2 Here is the content from the XTerm app-defaults file: *2: -misc-fixed-medium-r-normal-8-80-75-75-c-50-iso10646-1 The app-defaults files XTerm and UXTerm have both of these, but in the latter, those Unicode fonts are not inside the utf8Fonts layer.
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