@jbb's answer is mostly correct, I would just emphasize that a VFD with a fixed carrier frequency implies a lower frequency sinusoidal reference is modulating the duty cycle of a higher frequency square wave (the carrier). Typically (if not exclusively), this means the VFD employs a scalar (V/Hz) control scheme, rather than a vector (field-oriented) control scheme.
Note, also, that space-vector pulse width modulation is a switch control scheme that maximizes the use of the available bus voltage and not a motor control scheme, per se. So you could theoretically have a drive that uses a scalar motor control scheme with SVPWM, but it would be most unusual to say the least; carrier-based PWM is far more likely in such a case. In contrast, many older drives use a field-oriented motor control scheme with carrier-based PWM, so that combination is quite common.
@jbb - the venerable old thyristor-based cycloconverter is still commonly used at the very high power level, though it is being supplanted by the matrix converter.