Transformations (2 Viewers)

davidbarnes

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Can anyone explain to me transformations on an x, y axis? Eg - 2 x 2X
I can map that fine, although just don't get how to do a translation, eg, of 2X.
 

Slidey

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What's up?

y=x is your 'perfect' line. You should know how to graph that - just go 45 degrees from the origin in a north-east direction.

You can transform it in a number of ways:
1) You can change its slope
y=2x
The line is now twice as steep. For every unit you move in the x direction (across), you move up two in the y direction. Wheras y=x is move up one and across one. It is still in the north-east direction but it is more northerly now.

2) You can change its direction
This one is easy.
y=-x
This is the same line but instead of being north-east, it is north-west.

3) You can translate the line. This seems to be what you need help with.
y=x cuts the x-axis at (0,0) don't you agree? It also cuts the y-axis here.
What about y=2x? It is exactly the same. In general, y=ax where as is any number, cuts the x and y axes at (0,0).
What if we have y=x+1?
It cuts the x-axis when y=0. y=0=x+1 means x=-1. It cuts the y-axis when x=0 which is: y=1.
Right, so what is a translation?
A translation is when you add any number to the line:
y=x+1
y=3x+5
y=x-9
If you translate a line 1 unit to the right in the x direction, you've done the following:
y=x+1.

The general equation of the line:
y=ax+b

Any line can be formed from this. If you let a=1, b=0, you get:
y=x.
b is the translation, a is the slope. for y=x, a=1 because 1=1/1 or one unit up, one across. b=0 because y=x isn't translated at all.

For the line y=3x-9
a=3, b=-9

b is the translation, so y=3x-9 is moved LEFT along the x-axis by 0 units.

Finding the points of intersection:
x-intersection: when y=0: 3x-9=0 gives when x=3
y-intersection: when x=0: y=-9

Hope that helped in time.
 

davidbarnes

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Slidey said:
3) You can translate the line. This seems to be what you need help with.
y=x cuts the x-axis at (0,0) don't you agree? It also cuts the y-axis here.
What about y=2x? It is exactly the same. In general, y=ax where as is any number, cuts the x and y axes at (0,0).
What if we have y=x+1?
It cuts the x-axis when y=0. y=0=x+1 means x=-1. It cuts the y-axis when x=0 which is: y=1.
Right, so what is a translation?
A translation is when you add any number to the line:
y=x+1
y=3x+5
y=x-9
If you translate a line 1 unit to the right in the x direction, you've done the following:
y=x+1.
Right I got it all, bar this. By cutting the Y axis, do you mean the y intercept? Then I have absolutely no idea how you got

y=x+1
y=3x+5
y=x-9
If you translate a line 1 unit to the right in the x direction, you've done the following:
y=x+1.

I know how you got y=x+1, although not y=3x+5.
 

Slidey

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When something cuts the y-axis, it will always be at x=0. This is the y-intercept.

y=3x+5 is translated 5 units to the right.
It has x-intercept at y=0: x=-5/3
It has y-intercept at x=0: y=5

None of those lines are related. Each is different. They are each an example of a translation.
 
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narrowpin

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Slidey said:
When something cuts the y-axis, it will always be at x=0. This is the y-intercept.

y=3x+5 is translated 5 units to the right.
It has x-intercept at y=0: x=-5/3
It has y-intercept at x=0: y=5

None of those lines are related. Each is different. They are each an example of a translation.
WHATTTT. omg ^that is totally wrong. y= 3x+5 hasnt been translated 5 units to the right, it has be translated 5 units up.
 

PC

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This is a bit outside the realms of General Maths though.

As wonderful as transformations are.
 

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