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HA2 Transformation of Functions

This document covers transformations of functions, including translations, reflections, and scaling. It provides examples of how to graph various parent functions and their transformations, along with a summary of the transformation rules. Additionally, it emphasizes the order of operations when combining transformations of functions.

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Kousuke Yasumura
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
5 views

HA2 Transformation of Functions

This document covers transformations of functions, including translations, reflections, and scaling. It provides examples of how to graph various parent functions and their transformations, along with a summary of the transformation rules. Additionally, it emphasizes the order of operations when combining transformations of functions.

Uploaded by

Kousuke Yasumura
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Honors Algebra 2 Name:

Class Notes Date:


TRANSFORMATIONS OF FUNCTIONS

TRANSLATING Functions: Graph each parent function and each translated function.
y = x2 y= x y= x
1. y = x2 − 5 2. y= x+6 3. y = x − 1 + 5
y = (x − 4)2 y= x+4 y= x+4 −3

What happened and why?

REFLECTING Functions: Graph each set of equations on the same axes.

4. Summary of Reflections

Transformation Action Replace (x, y):


SCALING (Stretching and Compressing) Functions
5. Graph the following transformations of the 6. Graph the following transformations of the
function: f (x) = x 2
function: f (x) = x 3

Why are these transformations happening?

SUMMARY of Transformations
y = f (x − a) y = f (x) + a y = af (x)

y = f (ax) y = − f (x) y = f (−x)

COMBINING Transformations
*If a variable is both scaled (stretched/compressed) and translated, ALWAYS scale before you
translate.
*It doesn’t matter if you do horizontal or vertical transformations first—they are independent of each
other.

y = af ( b(x − h)) + k

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