so this option will be ignored. If \fIBoldAsColour\fP is set to 0
and you do not specify a bold font, \fIpterm\fP will overprint the
normal font to make it look bolder.
+.IP "\fB\-fw\fP \fIfont-name\fP"
+Specify the font to use for double-width characters (typically
+Chinese, Japanese and Korean text) displayed in the terminal.
+.IP "\fB\-fwb\fP \fIfont-name\fP"
+Specify the font to use for bold double-width characters (typically
+Chinese, Japanese and Korean text) Like \fI-fb\fP, this will be
+ignored unless the \fIBoldAsColour\fP resource is set to 0.
.IP "\fB\-geometry\fP \fIwidth\fPx\fIheight\fP"
Specify the size of the terminal, in rows and columns of text.
Unfortunately \fIpterm\fP does not currently support specifying the
encoding which is valid in an X logical font description should be
valid ("ibm-cp437", for example).
+\fIpterm\fP's default behaviour is to use the same character
+encoding as its primary font. If you supply a Unicode (iso10646-1)
+font, it will default to the UTF-8 character set.
+
Character set names are case-insensitive.
.IP "\fB\-nethack\fP"
Tells \fIpterm\fP to enable NetHack keypad mode, in which the
controls the font used to display bold text when \fIBoldAsColour\fP
is turned off. The default is unset (the font will be bolded by
printing it twice at a one-pixel offset).
+.IP "\fBpterm.WideFont\fP"
+This resource is the same as the \fI\-fw\fP command-line option: it
+controls the font used to display double-width characters. The
+default is unset (double-width characters cannot be displayed).
+.IP "\fBpterm.WideBoldFont\fP"
+This resource is the same as the \fI\-fwb\fP command-line option: it
+controls the font used to display double-width characters in bold,
+when \fIBoldAsColour\fP is turned off. The default is unset
+(double-width characters are displayed in bold by printing them
+twice at a one-pixel offset).
.IP "\fBpterm.ShadowBoldOffset\fP"
This resource can be set to an integer; the default is \-1. It
specifies the offset at which text is overprinted when using "shadow