rotate-screen

A small Python package for rotating the screen.


Keywords
python
License
MIT
Install
pip install rotate-screen==0.1.0

Documentation

Rotate Screen

PyPI - Python Version PyPI - Downloads GitHub

Platforms Supported

Windows is currently the only platform supported.

Installation

Clone the repo, download as a zip file, or use the following command...

pip install rotate-screen

Documentation

The package comes with some functions to get available displays in the form of <rotatescreen Display> objects. You can then use the <rotatescreen Display> object methods to change the orientation of the display.

Here are a few of the available package functions...

Function Returns
rotatescreen.get_displays() Returns a list of <rotatescreen Display> objects for each available display.
rotatescreen.get_secondary_displays() Returns a list of <rotatescreen Display> objects for every display apart from the primary display.
rotatescreen.get_primary_display() Returns a <rotatescreen Display> object for the primary display.

Here are the available methods (no return value) for a <rotatescreen Display> object...

Procedure Arguments Result
.rotate_to(pos) pos (int): Degrees to rotate the screen to. Must be one of 0, 90, 180, 270. Rotates the screen to desired.
.set_landscape() Rotates the screen to landscape.
.set_landscape_flipped() Rotates the screen to upside down landscape.
.set_portrait() Rotates the screen to portrait.
.set_portrait_flipped() Rotates the screen to upside down portrait.

Here are the available attributes for a <rotatescreen Display> object...

Attribute Returns
.current_orientation Returns (int) the current orientation of the display, will be one of 0, 90, 180, 270.
.is_primary Returns (bool) if the display is the primary monitor.
.info Returns (dict) monitor info.
.device Returns monitor device info.
.device_description Returns (str) visable name for display device.

Example: Ctrl+Alt+Arrow Shortcut

This is a simple example that implements the 'Ctrl+Alt+Arrow' keyboard shortcut for rotating the display. This is because some graphics cards don't come with this capability by default.

This example requires the keyboard module...

pip install keyboard

Here is the code! It adds hotkeys to rotate the primary display in the desired direction upon the user entering Ctrl, Alt and an arrow key. It then waits until the script is exited.

import rotatescreen
import keyboard

screen = rotatescreen.get_primary_display()

keyboard.add_hotkey('ctrl+alt+up', screen.set_landscape, suppress=True)
keyboard.add_hotkey('ctrl+alt+right', screen.set_portrait_flipped, suppress=True)
keyboard.add_hotkey('ctrl+alt+down', screen.set_landscape_flipped, suppress=True)
keyboard.add_hotkey('ctrl+alt+left', screen.set_portrait, suppress=True)

keyboard.wait()

Example: Do A Barrel Roll

This was a little joke script to show off some more of the modules functionality, due to the way windows rotates the display this is a pretty horrific looking, but entertaining. :)

import rotatescreen
import time

screen = rotatescreen.get_primary_display()
start_pos = screen.current_orientation

for i in range(1, 5):
    pos = abs((start_pos - i*90) % 360)
    screen.rotate_to(pos)
    time.sleep(1.5)