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Changes:
% There are two character named "hyphen". The original article explains
% the background of this decision (if one wanted to use a different
% hyphenation character and still be able to use the dash). So the first
% character should serve as "hyphen char" and the other one as "dash" in
% compound words. The character 0x2D is supposed to be the hyphen char,
% but since there used to be two characters of the same name in this
% file for some time, the tools like afmtotfm have been confused and
% remappedthe hyphen char to 0x7F automatically. After the second
% character's name was changed, hyphenation characters in existing
% tfm fonts (generated with the old ec.enc) have disappeared, so the
% second character has been renamed back to "hyphen". Anyone generating
% tfm fonts is strongly encouraged to make a copy of this file, rename
% it and change glyph names as required for their font.
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