This character is a Other Letter and is mainly used in the Tai Le script.
The glyph is not a composition. It has no designated width in East Asian texts. In bidirectional text it is written from left to right. When changing direction it is not mirrored. U+1960 offers a line break opportunity at its position depending on the further context.
The Wikipedia has the following information about this codepoint:
The Tai Le script (ᥖᥭᥰ ᥘᥫᥴ, [tai˦.lə˧˥]), or Dehong Dai script, is a Brahmic script used to write the Tai Nüa language spoken by the Tai Nua people of south-central Yunnan, China. (The language is also known as Nɯa, Dehong Dai and Chinese Shan.) It is written in horizontal lines from left to right, with spaces only between clauses and sentences.
The Tai Le script is approximately 700–800 years old and has used several different orthographic conventions.
Representations
System
Representation (click value to copy)
Nº
6496
UTF-8
E1 A5 A0
UTF-16
19 60
UTF-32
00 00 19 60
URL-Quoted
%E1%A5%A0
HTML hex reference
ᥠ
Wrong windows-1252 Mojibake
á¥
Encoding: GB18030 (hex bytes)
81 34 F6 30
RFC 5137
\u'1960'
Bash and Zsh inside echo -e
\u1960
C and C++
\u1960
C#
\u1960
CSS
\001960
Excel
=UNICHAR(6496)
Go
\u1960
JavaScript
\u1960
Modern JavaScript since ES6
\u{1960}
JSON
\u1960
Java
\u1960
Lua
\u{1960}
Matlab
char(6496)
Perl
"\x{1960}"
PHP
\u{1960}
PostgreSQL
U&'\1960'
PowerShell
`u{1960}
Python
\u1960
Ruby
\u{1960}
Rust
\u{1960}
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