 What I wanted to talk about on the Circuit Python Parsec today is display rotation. So I've been doing this little series on display IO things and often you'll display either text or shapes or bitmaps images onto one of the displays on a circuit Python based board. When you display an image you have a choice of your orientation is it essentially a sort of horizontal display either in that orientation or that orientation or is it a vertical display either that way or that way and depending on how you have a thing mounted or how you're using it you may want to pick different orientations. So what I have here is an example of some cool little pixel art this is of a little Casio keyboard and then when I press A I can switch to a different image but you can see this image has a vertical orientation so it makes more sense to turn the screen this way and when I do that I'm going to want to switch the display rotation so this changes everything to do with your display all of the values of where zero zero is for example x and y all of those things get updated as you change this rotation setting so if I go back to this horizontal image I can switch that rotation there and you'll see the way this works inside of Circuit Python when you've set up your display you can see this value display dot rotation is set to zero and that's this sort of default but we can put it zero 90 180 or 270 to get those four different orientations we can't do partial angles just these four orientations when I press one of these d-pad buttons I'm simply updating that display rotation equals zero 90 180 or 270 then I'm also using the A and B buttons to just do a sort of mini slideshow between images and so that's how you can adjust display rotation inside of Circuit Python using display rotation and that is your Circuit Python Parsec