Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
No description. Template parameters [Edit template data] Parameter Description Type Status Rotation angle 1 Positive degrees rotate right, negative values rotate left Default 0 Number optional CSS display display no description Default inline-block String optional See also: {{ Rotate text }} {{ MirrorH }} The above documentation is transcluded from Template:Transform-rotate/doc. (edit ...
The MediaWiki software as of 5 October 2011 checks image metadata such as EXIF and automatically rotates the image when it is uploaded. The file page may show the upright image, but thumbnails may be rotated. At the bottom of the file page there is a Metadata section— click on "Show extended details" to see the orientation.
Turned characters, those that have been rotated 180 degrees and thus appear upside-down (this is the most common); Sideways characters, those that have been rotated 90 degrees counterclockwise (generally the least supported, and used only for a handful of vowels in the Uralic Phonetic Alphabet system).
Image → Transform → Rotate 90 degrees clockwise; Filters → Blur → Gaussian blur (No need to blur if you use strong anti-aliasing during conversion. No significant difference between end results.) 2.0 px; Image → Scale Image... 25%; Cubic interpolation; You can view at normal size if you want by pressing 1, Ctrl+E; Save as File_name.png
English: Chinese characters from bronze inscriptions: examples which have been rotated 90 degrees, showing the influence of bamboo books. This is a snapshot of a document which I TYPED myself, thus being my creation, in Microsoft Word using fonts made available for public use by the Academia Sinica's Chinese Document Processing Laboratory (CDPL) under the Institute of Information Science with ...
Other rotated letters include the digraphs ᴂ and ᴔ. The "rotated" capital Q in Unicode is only turned 90 degrees: ℺. Additional small cap forms are found in the literature (e.g. turned ᴀ ʟ ᴜ), but are not supported as of Unicode 17.
Many East Asian scripts can be written horizontally or vertically. Chinese characters, Korean hangul, and Japanese kana may be oriented along either axis, as they consist mainly of disconnected logographic or syllabic units, each occupying a square block of space, thus allowing for flexibility for which direction texts can be written, be it horizontally from left-to-right, horizontally from ...
The presence of one or more 90° angles within a pictorial image is usually a good indication that the perspective is oblique. Various graphical projections and how they are produced Oblique projection of a cube with foreshortening by half, seen from the side Top view of a comparison of an oblique projection (left) and an orthographic ...