I personally use it in two different ways. One is that I have my sticky note rotated a little bit to make it more visually distinctive. The other is that I have two fuzzy clocks rotated so their left edges are roughly tangent to the edge of the clock where they touch it (about 30 degrees above and below the left edge). I also used a rotated eyes as an example and had a upside-down bkodoma widget which made it look like he was walking on the ceiling.
Another possibility for the icon: what if you made it similar to the resize icon, a rectangle? The rectangle would be rotated a little bit (maybe 10-45 degrees). A couple things could be added to make it more clear. One possibility would be to have a second rectangle in the background, occluded by the first rectangle except for the corners. Another would be some of arrows or vibrations to indicate the rectangle is moving. I attached a mockup of an example. -Todd On Tue, Sep 7, 2010 at 6:06 AM, Asraniel <asran...@fryx.ch> wrote: > For example my girlfriend has all her picture frames slightly rotated. > But i can't think of a usecase for turning them totaly upside down. > > Beat Wolf > > Am Dienstag 07 September 2010, um 12.00:15 schrieb Markus Slopianka: >> Hi. >> I wonder why Plasma widgets in Plasma Desktop can be rotated. Why would >> anyone need individual widgets to be upside down? Isn't this one of those >> micro-options we once stated to get rid of? >> >> Markus >> _______________________________________________ >> Plasma-devel mailing list >> Plasma-devel@kde.org >> https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/plasma-devel > > _______________________________________________ > Plasma-devel mailing list > Plasma-devel@kde.org > https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/plasma-devel >
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