DFONT to FTS Converter

Produce FITS scientific images from Mac DFONT fonts online

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Scientific Standard

FTS (FITS) is the gold standard in scientific imaging — your DFONT glyph renders become data that integrates with astronomy and research analysis pipelines.

Secure Processing

Your uploaded DFONT font files are deleted after conversion, and FTS output is removed from servers within 24 hours to maintain data privacy.

Cloud Rendering

No macOS or scientific imaging tools needed locally. Convertio renders your DFONT to FTS on remote servers and delivers the result to your browser.

How to convert DFONT to FTS

1

Select files from Computer, Google Drive, Dropbox, URL or by dragging it on the page.

2

Choose fts or any other format you need as a result (more than 200 formats supported)

3

Let the file convert and you can download your fts file right afterwards

About formats

DFONT (Data Fork TrueType) is a font file format introduced by Apple with Mac OS X 10.0 in March 2001, created to solve a fundamental compatibility problem in the transition from classic Mac OS to the Unix-based OS X architecture. Classic Mac fonts stored glyph data in the resource fork — a secondary file stream specific to the HFS file system — but OS X's Unix foundation and its use of UFS had no native resource fork support. DFONT relocates the entire resource fork structure into the data fork, wrapping the same TrueType font tables in a resource map that standard OS X typography APIs can read. The file is essentially a resource-fork-less TrueType suitcase. Apple bundled DFONT as the default format for system fonts shipped with OS X, and it remains present in macOS system directories. One advantage is seamless backward compatibility with Apple's existing font rendering stack — the internal structure mirrors classic resource-fork fonts, so CoreText and its predecessors handle DFONTs without any special conversion path. The single-fork design is another practical strength, ensuring that DFONT files survive intact when stored on non-HFS volumes, transferred over networks, or managed by version control systems. While Apple has increasingly moved toward OpenType (.otf/.ttc) for newer system fonts, DFONT files continue to appear in macOS installations and in font collections originating from the OS X era.
Developer: Apple Computer
Initial release: 2001
FTS is a file extension for the Flexible Image Transport System (FITS), the standard data format used in astronomy since 1981 when it was defined by Don Wells, Eric Greisen, and R.H. Harten at the National Radio Astronomy Observatory, and subsequently endorsed by the International Astronomical Union in 1982. FITS was designed from the outset as a self-describing archival format: each file begins with one or more 2880-byte header blocks containing ASCII keyword-value pairs that describe the data's dimensions, coordinate system, observation parameters, and provenance, followed by data blocks in a variety of numeric types — 8/16/32/64-bit integers and 32/64-bit IEEE floating-point values. FITS supports multi-dimensional arrays (images, data cubes, hypercubes), binary tables for catalog data, and ASCII tables, with multiple Header/Data Units (HDUs) that can coexist in a single file. The format handles specialized astronomical data: spectral cubes, radio interferometry visibilities, multi-extension mosaic images from CCD arrays, and time-series photometry. One advantage is scientific rigor: FITS mandates that all metadata needed to interpret the data physically — coordinate transformations (WCS), photometric calibration, telescope and instrument parameters — travels with the file, eliminating the metadata-loss problem that plagues general-purpose image formats in scientific contexts. The format's longevity and institutional backing is another strength — virtually every observatory, space telescope (Hubble, James Webb, Chandra), and astronomical software package (DS9, IRAF, Astropy) uses FITS as its primary data format.
Developer: NASA / IAU
Initial release: 1981

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert DFONT to FTS?

FITS is the standard format in astronomy and scientific imaging. Converting DFONT to FTS allows font glyph data to be processed by scientific analysis tools.

How do I open an FTS file?

SAOImage DS9, FITS Liberator, Astropy (Python), and GIMP (with plugin) open FITS files. Many astronomy and scientific data tools support this format natively.

What type of data does FTS store?

FITS stores image data along with metadata headers. Your DFONT glyph render becomes pixel array data with descriptive headers that analysis tools can parse.

Is FTS commonly used outside astronomy?

While primarily an astronomy standard, FITS has been adopted in medical imaging, particle physics, and other fields where precise numerical image data matters.

Does the conversion require special software?

Not at all. Convertio handles everything in the browser — upload your DFONT from any device and receive a valid FTS file without installing any scientific tools.