in aromatic systems, the double bonds are not "fixed" but completely delocalised instead
hence, in example B to draw two different Lewis structures is ... meaningless
... and as a consequence, there is no such thing as two different positions for the fluoride atoms
structure A on the other hand is a cyclobutadiene derivative, and would be an antiaromat if it went for resonance ( 4 [itex]\Pi[/itex] electrons: look at Hueckel's rule), and that would be very bad from an energetical point of view.
this the molecule tries to avoid, showing localised, individual double bonds instead:
(hope this picture talks, though it's labelled in German: "Verzerrung" = "distortion" , "lokalisierte Doppelbindungen" = "localised double bonds" )
(
cyclobutadiene and most of its derivatives are very unstable hence)
Nevertheless, if we look at the fluoride atoms involved, we had two isomers here: on with a double bond inbetween the fluoride atoms, and one without
the whole point with these two molecules hence is, whether they'll show delocalised double bonds or not.
one does (as it's aromatic) , the other doesn't (as else it would be antiaromatic)
regards
Ingo