What is the Default orientation for a Android Tablet?

I ordered my mom a Samsung Galaxy S2 Tablet with the 9.7" screen. Amazon will ship it in another week.

I know my Android phone defaults to portrait. I can pull down the shade and change to auto-rotate. That’s the only two options. I only use auto-rotate to watch TV shows in Landscape. I get annoyed when the screen rotates by accident. I wish fixed landscape was an option.

What about an Android tablet? It seems like they are designed for landscape viewing. Is that the default instead of portrait?

What is the default orientation for Android tablets?

There isn’t one. It all depends on which app you are using.

On my Tab a I can “fix” the aspect to either portrait or landscape but in some cases an app that that I start will force it to the required aspect anyway and revert to my “fixed” aspect when it closes.

Do a search for “rotation” in the Play store. There are a number of free apps that can lock orientation on a phone. I use one called “Adaptive Rotation Lock Free”. Not the ideal solution (I think landscape should be the default on any device, and that video apps should not allow tunnel vision mode at all), but it’s all we have now.

I’m a bit nervous about Samsung’s version of Android. I’ve been told they have their own App Play store and other custom features. Thankfully, Google App Store is also available on the home screen. I plan to only use the Google App Play store.

I’m guessing the Shade and Setup screens aren’t too different on Samsung devices?

I’ve been spoiled by my Motorola X pure phone. It’s stock Android Marshmallow.

I may have my hands full setting up my mom"s tablet. I’ve never used a tablet. I’m hoping it’s not much different from a phone.

You can quite happily ignore the Samsung store.

Samsung put their own Android skin - called Touchwiz - on their phones and tablets. Some things will be slightly different to the pure Android you are accustomed to, but not massively so.

Many, many Android apps assume portrait mode and, worse, some will override the current landscape mode and put it into portrait mode.

Google used to provide a “tablet” programming package so that programmers could easily set defaults for their app on a tablet. It got little use and was dropped.

As far as almost all Android programmers out there, it’s a phone world. Period.

I’ve learned all this by using everything in landscape mode and not always succeeding.

I found this Tips and Tricks video for the Samsung Galaxy Tab S2. It’ll help me learn the Samsung skin. Thank you Baron Greenback for identifying it as Touchwiz.

This video is too advanced for my mom. She’s never seen Android. I plan to send her a link to a basic introduction to Android tutorial.

I didn’t realize how big 9.7" is compared to a phone.

Portrait mode looks pretty good in that video. That may be ok for daily use.

Mom will be using the New York Times and Washington Post Apps. They should have a nice layout for reading the news onTablets.

There is no default; home screen and most apps should auto-rotate. But the Samsung S series tablets have the physical buttons on the short side, making them more natural to use in portrait mode. The placement of the power/volume switches are also more natural in portrait mode.

I think all Android tablets have a “lock orientation” feature accessible through the drop-down menu. I know my Samsung S3 tablet does.

My default video program that came with the phone has a button up top which rotates video. Image of a phone at 45 degrees with rotational arrows. VLC doesn’t seem to have an option which is strange.

I have the Samsung Galaxy TabPro 8.4 the immediate ancestor to your unit. You can (if desired) fix portrait or landscape mode so it does not auto rotate to portrait. I would imagine the S2 is the same. I ordered an S2 but returned it as it was just too “square” to be used or viewed comfortably. The 8.4 has (for me) the perfect aspect ratio. The S2 hardware was fine it was the screen ratio profile that drove me batty.

I appreciate everyone’s help with Android.

I know the OS can vary a lot depending on how each manufacturer customizes it.

Pi-curious.

You can easily lock any Android device in any orientation. Just let it rotate automatically, pull down the menu, and toggle off autorotation.

I’ve only encountered a few apps that force you into portrait mode, and all of them are games clearly designed for that orientation, so it make sense. Just like many other games are clearly designed for landscape mode (often because they are PC ports).

Oh, and I disagree about physical buttons. Having them on the short side tends to actually make it easier to use in landscape mode, as you can reach them easily since your hand is already there (Landscape mode to me means two-handed). I wish that I could find a way to get devices with software buttons to keep them on the side in landscape mode.

Unless you mean the power and volume buttons, where you can accidentally hit them. But then you just have to figure out how to hold your hand.

“Any” is way overstating it. Not all Android devices even allow rotation, let alone have a lock orientation setting. E.g., my FireTV Stick has no setting regarding orientation. For one thing, the orientation of the stick has nothing whatsoever to do with the orientation of the screen it’s attached to!

I’ve also tested several versions of Android on a Raspberry Pi and same deal.

Many Android devices have no sensor to determine device orientation. E.g., my Nook ereader’s original OS forced portrait mode. I installed Cyanogenmod on it and set it to be landscape. But some apps display portrait only and then leave it like that afterwards so I have to manually set it to landscape again for reading.

(And of course I’ve run into apps that assume portrait mode so the screen is stretched wide with stuff cut off at the bottom.)