\dd Specify the font to use for bold text displayed in the terminal. If
the \cw{BoldAsColour} resource is set to 1 (the default), bold text
will be displayed in different colours instead of a different font,
-so this option will be ignored. If \cw{BoldAsColour} is set to 0
+so this option will be ignored. If \cw{BoldAsColour} is set to 0 or 2
and you do not specify a bold font, \cw{puttytel} will overprint the
normal font to make it look bolder.
\dd Specify the font to use for bold double-width characters
(typically Chinese, Japanese and Korean text). Like \cw{-fb}, this
-will be ignored unless the \cw{BoldAsColour} resource is set to 0.
+will be ignored unless the \cw{BoldAsColour} resource is set to 0 or 2.
\dt \cw{\-geometry} \e{geometry}
\dt \cw{\-bfg} \e{colour}
\dd Specify the foreground colour to use for bold text, if the
-\cw{BoldAsColour} resource is set to 1 (the default).
+\cw{BoldAsColour} resource is set to 1 (the default) or 2.
\dt \cw{\-bbg} \e{colour}
\dd Specify the foreground colour to use for bold reverse-video text, if
-the \cw{BoldAsColour} resource is set to 1 (the default). (This
+the \cw{BoldAsColour} resource is set to 1 (the default) or 2. (This
colour is best thought of as the bold version of the background
colour; so it only appears when text is displayed \e{in} the
background colour.)
to specify it explicitly if you have changed the default using the
\cw{ScrollBar} resource.
-\dt \cw{\-log} \e{filename}
+\dt \cw{\-log} \e{logfile}, \cw{\-sessionlog} \e{logfile}
\dd This option makes \cw{puttytel} log all the terminal output to a file
as well as displaying it in the terminal.