I reversed the synonym, which didn't seem to have much of an effect on either true-type-fonts or ttf still mapping to the hyphenated tag, so I explicitly performed a merge, and that seems to have sorted it.
FWIW, there's truetype (without hyphens) that is synonymized to true-type-fonts (with hyphens) (ref: tag synonym page) – Andrew T.
This comes from ttf originally being a synonym of true-type-fonts back in 2010. The latter tag, hyphens and all, was created back in 2008. truetype was added shortly after.
Truthfully, I should've changed it the first time I encountered it after becoming a mod (before, I didn't pay much attention to tag synonyms), considering I took my hyphens in tags very seriously. (I even found a gatekeeping comment, ew, much cringe, but to be fair, that's Apple. Told y'all I wasn't always the good moderator I strive to be today.)
Anyways, now we just need a mod to notice – Oleg Valter
Yeah, I'm surprised no one else paid attention to this in the last 16 hours. I guess it's the weekend. I had just ended my Stack session for the night, been to bed, then been to church. Then I saw this.
If the downvoter would be so bold as to say why a mis-spelling as a tag is a good idea, I am sure we would all be interested to hear more. – Andrew Morton
I see what you did there.
In what context you program with truetype fonts? – Braiam
Font files are programs. They're often used as complete packages for typesetting (typography, cosmetic) reasons, yes, but they are in fact programs in their own right. And you can write a font using just instructions, even though it's strongly recommended to use font authoring software like FontLab, Glyphs or FontCreator.