Presumably the question pertains to Portrait mode. Windows XP does not feature native support for Portrait mode. However, your video card's driver should include a Control Panel which will either auto-detect, or allow the user to switch to Portrait mode, if the monitor supports it. If the monitor does not support Portrait mode then feature will likely not be available. There is no way in Windows XP to rotate a document independent of the orientation of the screen.
Any Degree! :)
Save and close the document. Do it from Windows Explorer. Find the document and right click on it and you can rename it.Save and close the document. Do it from Windows Explorer. Find the document and right click on it and you can rename it.Save and close the document. Do it from Windows Explorer. Find the document and right click on it and you can rename it.Save and close the document. Do it from Windows Explorer. Find the document and right click on it and you can rename it.Save and close the document. Do it from Windows Explorer. Find the document and right click on it and you can rename it.Save and close the document. Do it from Windows Explorer. Find the document and right click on it and you can rename it.Save and close the document. Do it from Windows Explorer. Find the document and right click on it and you can rename it.Save and close the document. Do it from Windows Explorer. Find the document and right click on it and you can rename it.Save and close the document. Do it from Windows Explorer. Find the document and right click on it and you can rename it.Save and close the document. Do it from Windows Explorer. Find the document and right click on it and you can rename it.Save and close the document. Do it from Windows Explorer. Find the document and right click on it and you can rename it.
It rotates 90 degrees.
Document is a functional area of Windows MS Word program yes its right
If you have Windows Movie Maker 2.6 (I think) or older, then upload your video and go to "video effects." When you scroll down, there are options like "rotate 90," "rotate 180," and "rotate 270."
Use Windows Movie Maker if your pc is windows system, if you need mac version, you can try imovie. When opened go to effects then rotate the amount you want.
file
CTRL+S for most Windows-standard programs.
.doc
Yes. Documents are platform agnostic; as long as you have a program on Windows to open the document, there should be no problems.
file
No reason why not - providing the document was saved in a format OpenOffice can read. Windows 7 is the operating system - OpenOffice is a program.