In Unicode, some characters are "mirrored". This means that their
images are mirrored horizontally in text that is laid out from right
to left. For instance, "(" would become its mirror image, ")", in
right-to-left text.
If @ch has the Unicode mirrored property and there is another unicode
character that typically has a glyph that is the mirror image of @ch's
glyph and @mirrored_ch is set, it puts that character in the address
pointed to by @mirrored_ch. Otherwise the original character is put.
In Unicode, some characters are "mirrored". This means that their images are mirrored horizontally in text that is laid out from right to left. For instance, "(" would become its mirror image, ")", in right-to-left text.
If @ch has the Unicode mirrored property and there is another unicode character that typically has a glyph that is the mirror image of @ch's glyph and @mirrored_ch is set, it puts that character in the address pointed to by @mirrored_ch. Otherwise the original character is put.