85

Is there a way to flip the SVG coordinate system so that [0,0] is in the lower left instead of the upper left?

9 Answers 9

85

I have done a lot of experimentation, and the only logical method is as follows:

<g transform="translate(0,400)">
<g transform="scale(1,-1)">

Where 400 is the height of the image. What this does it move everything down so that the top of the image is now and the bottom of the image, then the scale operation flips the Y coordinates, so that the bit that is now off the page/image is flipped back up to fill the space left behind.

8
  • 5
    Do you need the first translate? I've already accomplished that through the viewbox="-200 -200 400 400". Apr 4, 2014 at 21:17
  • 9
    These operations can be combined on one line. <g transform="translate(0,100) scale(1,-1)"> May 5, 2016 at 17:07
  • 27
    But now the text is upside down. May 18, 2016 at 12:33
  • 4
    You can use a single matrix transformation instead of separate translate and scale transformations. To flip the y-axis, try <g transform="matrix(1 0 0 -1 0 400"> (400 being the height of the image).
    – r3mainer
    Mar 9, 2017 at 4:18
  • 3
    @felix how did you fix the upside text problem? May 14, 2019 at 15:52
43

The best all around combo I've found for transforming to a cartesian coordinate system is pretty simple:

css

svg.cartesian {
  display:flex;
}

/* Flip the vertical axis in <g> to emulate cartesian. */
svg.cartesian > g {
  transform: scaleY(-1);
}

/* Re-flip all <text> element descendants to their original side up. */
svg.cartesian > g text {
  transform: scaleY(-1);
}
<html>
  <head></head>
  <body>

  <svg class="cartesian" viewBox="-100 -100 200 200" preserveAspectRatio="xMidYMid meet">
  <g>
    <!-- SVG Start -->

    <!-- Vertical / Horizontal Axis: Can be removed if you don't want x/y axes. -->
    <path d="M0 -100 V 200" stroke="green" stroke-width="0.5" stroke-opacity="0.5" />
    <path d="M-100 0 H 200" stroke="green" stroke-width="0.5" stroke-opacity="0.5" />
    
    <!-- Plotting: This is an example plotting two points at (20, 20) and (-50, -35), replace it with your data. -->
    <g transform="translate(20, 20)">
      <circle r="1" />
      <text>(20, 20)</text>
    </g>
    <g transform="translate(-50, -35)">
      <circle r="0.5" />
      <text>(-50, -35)</text>
    </g>

    <!-- SVG End -->
  </g>
  </svg>
    </body>
  </html>

This will auto-unflip all the text elements on the page via the css scaleY(-1).

9
  • 6
    A bit underrated this answer, it seems to me.
    – jiron
    Apr 24, 2019 at 11:54
  • 1
    Thanks! I'm glad I wrote this down. I refer back to it whenever I need to do this. I just updated with comments explaining what the parts do so it's easier to use. Apr 25, 2019 at 12:32
  • 1
    This could use more explanation. Got it working but not trivially. I would add some, but don't understand it all yet...
    – Tony
    May 12, 2019 at 3:15
  • 1
    @Tony - I added more information to the comments. Let me know whats confusing specifically and I'll try to improve it. Jun 3, 2019 at 22:11
  • 1
    Thanks for the update. I added a couple comments to the CSS, I think it's pretty understandable now.
    – Tony
    Jun 5, 2019 at 20:44
14

I know this is old, but I was doing the same thing, tried @Nippysaurus version but this is too annoying since everything will be rotated (so if you put images, you'll have to rotate them back). There's another solution though

What I did was simply move the viewBox of the svg and invert all coordinates on the y axis (and removing the height of the object to be at the bottom left corner on it too), like:

<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" version="1.1" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" width="200" height="300" viewBox="0 -300 200 300">
  <rect x="20" y="-40" width="20" height="20" stroke="black" stroke-width="1px"></rect>
</svg>

this will put a rect at 20,20 from the bottom left corner of the svg, see http://jsfiddle.net/DUVGz/

2
  • At first sight this seems a kludge, however, having tried all of the other solutions, I have to agree with @Guillaume that all of the transform solutions are a PIA due to the effect on text, etc..., so this is the solution I've adopted for SVG output.
    – Grimxn
    Dec 19, 2015 at 12:40
  • But how will transformations inside transformations fan out? Ie. nested groups ...
    – user3638471
    Feb 20, 2017 at 9:57
5

If you don't know the size of the svg than you can use CSS transformations for the whole SVG element:

#parrot {
    transform-origin: 50% 50%; /* center of rotation is set to the center of the element */
    transform: scale(1,-1);
}

Credits: https://sarasoueidan.com/blog/svg-transformations/#transforming-svgs-with-css

4

Yes, a coordinate rotation of -90 followed by a translation of + the height of your new figure should do it. There is an example at W3C.

3
  • I think what you had in mind is a rotate 180, followed by a translation of -w and -h. This does not work, [0,0] is still at the top left. Oct 3, 2010 at 8:52
  • I suspect that your SVG implementation is non-conformant which isn't surprising for a (presumably) rarely used feature. An affine rotation of -90 moves the Cartesian quadrant IV (+x, -y) into quadrant I (+x, +y). A rotation of 180 degrees would put your reference frame into quadrant II with the origin in the lower left. The reason your self-answer works is that it is congruent to my original answer but likely uses better tested bits of your SVG interpreter of choice. Personally, I'd just calculate the affine transformation in my user-space code and be pessimistic about SVG capabilities.
    – msw
    Oct 3, 2010 at 9:46
  • You are probably right. I am using Safari on OS X 10.6, so will test it on a Windows machine tomorrow. Oct 3, 2010 at 11:44
3
<g transform="translate(0,400) scale(1,-1)">

which also equivalent to below

<g transform="scale(1,-1) translate(0,-400) ">
-1

An alternative is to use D3 v4 scaleLinear to create a function that will do the swapping for you.

import * as d3 from "d3";

...

// Set the height to the actual value to where you want to shift the coords.
// Most likely based on the size of the element it is contained within
let height = 1; 
let y = d3.scaleLinear()
  .domain([0,1])
  .range([height,0]);

console.log("0 = " + y(0));       // = 1
console.log("0.5 = " + y(0.5));   // = 0.5
console.log("1 = " + y(1));       // = 0
console.log("100 = " + y(100));   // = -99
console.log("-100 = " + y(-100)); // = 101

See runable code via tonic

-2

What I did normally is drawing/putting the coordinate at the negative value of y-axis on the cartesian plane. Later on transfer the coordinate by replacing the negative value of y-axis into positive value.

-7

I think the simpliest way to rotate element for 180 deg is that you rotate for 180.1 deg;

transform="translate(180.1,0,0)"

1

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