By @poetVecheslaff
August 21, 2018
I searched web for what may dir="ltr" and trbidi="on" mean? So I have found that: dir means direction of text on page of the Blogger, "ltr" means left-to-right, but it can be right-to-left: "rtl", so the Blogger uses this HTML because there Asian bloggers may write from right-to-left. See details here: → HTML dir Attribute
So, then I have found that trbidi="on" means transliteration bidirection, that is the Blogger has the HTML that allows the transliterations work both "ltr" and "rtl" bidirections. See details (therein is a bit nebulous but I understood this like that 💻) → direction BY SARA COPE LAST UPDATED ON JULY 27, 2015
Also I have found that if you don't like these HTMLs, you can easy disable this in the Blogger settings: try to find in Settings: Transliteration and formatting: disable (no, I really don't care about it, but some Bloggers disable this 😒 Why so?.. I don't know actually 😁)
See in detail → Remove Dir="Ltr" Trbidi="On" From Blogger Posts
August 21, 2018
I searched web for what may dir="ltr" and trbidi="on" mean? So I have found that: dir means direction of text on page of the Blogger, "ltr" means left-to-right, but it can be right-to-left: "rtl", so the Blogger uses this HTML because there Asian bloggers may write from right-to-left. See details here: → HTML dir Attribute
So, then I have found that trbidi="on" means transliteration bidirection, that is the Blogger has the HTML that allows the transliterations work both "ltr" and "rtl" bidirections. See details (therein is a bit nebulous but I understood this like that 💻) → direction BY SARA COPE LAST UPDATED ON JULY 27, 2015
Also I have found that if you don't like these HTMLs, you can easy disable this in the Blogger settings: try to find in Settings: Transliteration and formatting: disable (no, I really don't care about it, but some Bloggers disable this 😒 Why so?.. I don't know actually 😁)
See in detail → Remove Dir="Ltr" Trbidi="On" From Blogger Posts