This character is a Nonspacing Mark and is mainly used in the Kannada script.
The glyph is not a composition. It has no designated width in East Asian texts. In bidirectional text it acts as Nonspacing Mark. When changing direction it is not mirrored. U+0CBC prohibits a line break before it.
The Wikipedia has the following information about this codepoint:
The nuqta (Hindi: नुक़्ता, Urdu: نقطہ, romanized: nuqtā; sometimes also spelled nukta), is a diacritic mark that was introduced in Devanagari and some other Indic scripts to represent sounds not present in the original scripts. It takes the form of a dot placed below a character. This idea is inspired from the Arabic script; for example, there are some letters in Urdu that share the same basic shape but differ in the placement of dots(s) or nuqta(s) in the Perso-Arabic script: the letter ع ayn, with the addition of a nuqta on top, becomes the letter غ g͟hayn.
Representations
System
Representation (click value to copy)
Nº
3260
UTF-8
E0 B2 BC
UTF-16
0C BC
UTF-32
00 00 0C BC
URL-Quoted
%E0%B2%BC
HTML hex reference
಼
Wrong windows-1252 Mojibake
◌಼
Encoding: GB18030 (hex bytes)
81 32 AE 34
RFC 5137
\u'0CBC'
Bash and Zsh inside echo -e
\u0CBC
C and C++
\u0CBC
C#
\u0CBC
CSS
\000CBC
Excel
=UNICHAR(3260)
Go
\u0CBC
JavaScript
\u0CBC
Modern JavaScript since ES6
\u{cbc}
JSON
\u0CBC
Java
\u0CBC
Lua
\u{CBC}
Matlab
char(3260)
Perl
"\x{CBC}"
PHP
\u{cbc}
PostgreSQL
U&'\0CBC'
PowerShell
`u{CBC}
Python
\u0CBC
Ruby
\u{cbc}
Rust
\u{cbc}
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