Wear goes by numerous names , cutter compensation , wear etc .
Incontrol , wear or inverse wear would be selected in fusion depending on how your motion contoller want to see it - just need to work out how the post processor and the motion control software work together which is way above my pay grade.
It seems the post processor is the part that lets down all the notion control software system , the people like fusion/aspire want to sell/use their product so they support well the big players , the motion control people make a good product but dont develop the post processors in conjuction with the software guys to suit their product but leave it to the cam guys who have no real interest in the small players.
I see it being used in Mach3 and Pathpilot though
my understanding of how it should work from years ago in industry is after doing a run you measure a part , if its off by 0.0025 then you would adjust your wear offset value in the tool table for that tool , so next time you run the part it accounts for the fact the tool is cutting to a slightly different size , depending on how your tool wear or tolerence is you would inspect the part and compensate every "x number " parts for any tool wear.
I find the tools I buy dont measure exactly or cut to the exact size I have setup in the cam tool table so at present I have to go back into cam , modify the tool diameter to compensate then repost the gcode , after doing a test cut. then make a adjustment again repost gcode and retest - this is fine but the computer I use for fusion is in a different building to where my machine , would be so nice to do it on the machine.
https://www.autodesk.com/products/fusio ... pensation/