Hi, could anyone please explain the reasoning to these sketches. I don't feel satisfied just memorising them, without knowing how they really work
y = -f(x) --> just change the y-coordinate of every point on the function y = f(x), i.e flip f(x) about the x-axis
y = f(-x) --> change the x-coordinate of every point on the original function
y = |f(x)| --> ?
y = f|(x)| ---> same y-value for the corresponding x-value. x>0 = f(x), x<0 = f(x)
|y| = f(x) --> this confuses me a lot
Thanks in advance!
y = -f(x) --> just change the y-coordinate of every point on the function y = f(x), i.e flip f(x) about the x-axis
y = f(-x) --> change the x-coordinate of every point on the original function
y = |f(x)| --> ?
y = f|(x)| ---> same y-value for the corresponding x-value. x>0 = f(x), x<0 = f(x)
|y| = f(x) --> this confuses me a lot
Thanks in advance!