CID to DFONT Converter

Turn CID-keyed fonts into macOS-native DFONT format online

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Apple Native

DFONT is recognized natively by macOS and its font management system. Your CID font becomes a first-class citizen on every Mac.

CJK Fonts for Mac

Migrate your CID-keyed CJK font collection to DFONT for direct use in macOS applications like Pages, Keynote, and Final Cut Pro.

Font Privacy Protected

Uploaded CID fonts are deleted after processing, and DFONT outputs are purged within 24 hours — your typeface data stays confidential.

How to convert CID to DFONT

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

CID (Character Identifier) is a font architecture developed by Adobe Systems and specified in June 1993 to address the challenges of fonts containing very large glyph sets, particularly for CJK (Chinese, Japanese, Korean) scripts. Traditional PostScript fonts identify glyphs by name, which becomes impractical when a font contains tens of thousands of characters — a typical Japanese font may include over 20,000 glyphs. CID-keyed fonts replace glyph names with numeric identifiers organized by a character collection and ordering (such as Adobe-Japan1 or Adobe-GB1), dramatically reducing overhead for glyph access and subsetting. The architecture defines three PostScript font types: Type 9 (CID-keyed Type 1 outlines), Type 10 (CID-keyed Type 3), and Type 11 (CID-keyed Type 42/TrueType). A primary advantage is efficient handling of massive character sets — the numeric CID approach eliminates the memory and processing cost of maintaining thousands of glyph name strings. CID fonts also support sophisticated CMap resources that map encoding values to CIDs, enabling a single font to serve multiple encoding schemes (Unicode, Shift-JIS, Big5) without duplicating glyph data. The architecture integrates well with PDF subsetting, allowing documents to embed only the glyphs actually used. CID-keyed technology laid the foundation for CJK support in both OpenType and modern PDF workflows, and remains active in print production and document processing systems worldwide.
Developer: Adobe Systems
Initial release: June 11, 1993
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

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert CID to DFONT?

DFONT is a macOS-native format that stores fonts in the data fork. Converting CID to DFONT ensures your CJK fonts integrate smoothly with Apple systems.

How do I install a DFONT?

Double-click the DFONT file on macOS to open Font Book, then click Install. The font becomes available in all Mac applications immediately.

Does DFONT support CJK characters?

Yes — DFONT handles large glyph sets and is commonly used for system CJK fonts on macOS, so your CID character repertoire fits naturally.

Can I use DFONT on Windows?

DFONT is specific to macOS. For Windows use, convert your CID font to TTF or OTF instead, which work across all platforms.

Is this service free?

Yes — Convertio converts CID to DFONT at zero cost. No signup, no installation — just a browser and your font file.