I was not talking about outputting volts or amps. (regulating voltage or regulating current)What i meant was that most converters are built to operate with a voltage output not a current output, and if you need a voltage output then you cant use a current output so there is little sense in talking about it.
Or did i misunderstand something ?
Here is a PDF.
https://www.ti.com/lit/an/slua119/slua119.pdf
In a voltage mode PWM a OSC generates a ramp that is used to set on/off time. This functions happens with out regard to what the switch is doing.
In current mode, the "ramp" comes from the current building up in the switch and transformer, (no ramp from the OSC).
In current mode the current is watched nS by nS.
The output can regulate voltage or current or power, it does not matter. The point is that current and inductance is in the fast loop.
Notice the point Vs goes back to the PWM COMP.