% Written by Tomas Rokicki, modified by Paul Taylor
%
%   These macros allow you to rotate or flip a \TeX\ box.  Very useful for
%   sideways tables or upsidedown answers.
%
%   To use, create a box containing the information you want to rotate.
%   (An hbox or vbox will do.)  Now call \rotr\boxnum to rotate the
%   material and create a new box with the appropriate (flipped) dimensions.
%   \rotr rotates right, \rotl rotates left, \rotu turns upside down, and
%   \rotf flips.  These boxes may contain other rotated boxes.
%
\newdimen\rotdimen
\def\vspec#1{\special{ps:#1}}%  passes #1 verbatim to the output
\def\rotstart#1{\vspec{gsave currentpoint currentpoint translate
   #1 neg exch neg exch translate}}% #1 can be any origin-fixing transformation
\def\rotfinish{\vspec{currentpoint grestore moveto}}% gets back in synch
%
%
%   First, the rotation right. The reference point of the rotated box
%   is the lower right corner of the original box.
%
\def\rotr#1{\setbox2\hbox{#1}\rotdimen=\ht2\advance\rotdimen by\dp2%
   \hbox to\rotdimen{\hskip\ht2\vbox to\wd2{\rotstart{90 rotate}%
   \box2\vss}\hss}\rotfinish}
%
%   Next, the rotation left. The reference point of the rotated box
%   is the upper left corner of the original box.
%
\def\rotl#1{\setbox2\hbox{#1}\rotdimen=\ht2\advance\rotdimen by\dp2%
   \hbox to\rotdimen{\vbox to\wd2{\vskip\wd2\rotstart{270 rotate}%
   \box2\vss}\hss}\rotfinish}%
%
%   Upside down is simple. The reference point of the rotated box
%   is the upper right corner of the original box. (The box's height
%   should be the current font's xheight, \fontdimen5\font,
%   if you want that xheight to be at the baseline after rotation.)
%
\def\rotu#1{\setbox2\hbox{#1}\rotdimen=\ht2\advance\rotdimen by\dp2%
   \hbox to\wd2{\hskip\wd2\vbox to\rotdimen{\vskip\rotdimen
   \rotstart{-1 dup scale}\box2\vss}\hss}\rotfinish}%
%
%   And flipped end for end is pretty ysae too. We retain the baseline.
%
\def\rotf#1{\setbox2\hbox{#1}\hbox to\wd2{\hskip\wd2\rotstart{-1 1 scale}%
   \box2\hss}\rotfinish}%
