If you set a transform of rotate(180), it rotates the element relative to the origin, not relative to the text anchor. So, if your text elements also have an x and y attribute set to position them, it’s quite likely that you’ve rotated the text off-screen. For example, if you tried,
<text x="200" y="100" transform="rotate(180)">Hello!</text>
the text anchor would be at ?-200,100?. If you want the text anchor to stay at ?200,100?, then you can use the transform to position the text before rotating it, thereby changing the origin.
<text transform="translate(200,100)rotate(180)">Hello!</text>
Another option is to use the optional cx and cy arguments to SVG’s rotate transform, so that you can specify the origin of rotation. This ends up being a bit redundant, but for completeness, it looks like this:
<text x="200" y="100" transform="rotate(180,200,100)">Hello World!</text>
与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…