I remember visiting a college in 1985 (readers, I’m that ancient), and seeing the height of glamor and magic: a portrait-orientation CRT screen that was part of a typesetting system. Because type was composed in “galleys,” long runs of relatively narrow columns, someone entering copy could more easily see a long run of text this way.

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Computers have come a long way, but this orientation remains the same. You may wind up with a lot of tasks that are better suited for a long vertical, like long runs of text that you’re writing, lots of lengthy menus or a huge array of palettes, or material that stacks well in wide rectangles from top to bottom for reference, like resized windows.

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Long ago, you had to rely on drivers or third-party software to rotate a monitor’s display, but Apple added it to its Mac operating systems long ago. It’s not precisely hidden—though it can be, more in a moment—but it may be something you never considered.

Some monitors even include a rotation joint where the display meet its stand. I recall accidentally partially rotating a monitor a few years ago that I didn’t know had such a joint and thought I’d broken it for a moment!

In most cases, you should be able to open the Displays preference pane and if macOS supports rotation on a monitor, a Rotate or Rotation menu appears in the Display tab, with options that can vary by version of macOS and display features. Apple notes mysteriously, “If you don’t see the pop-up menu, your computer doesn’t support this feature.” It doesn’t maintain a list of which Macs have or don’t have it. iMacs don’t appear to support native rotation.

On older versions of Mac OS X and macOS, you may need to open System Preferences and while holding down Command and Option click the Displays item to force a rotation menu to appear.

If your Mac won’t rotate its internal display or external displays, SwitchResX ($16) may be able to help.

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This Mac 911 article is in response to a question submitted by Macworld reader Brett.

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