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y = ln f(x) (1 Viewer)

Masaken

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is the above transformation tested in exams? (eg. given a curve f(x) drawn out, sketch the transformation y = ln f(x)?) it's not in the textbooks i use for school and i've only seen it appear in my tutoring qns and i think once in a school paper ages ago but that was it
 
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Trebla

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In general, if you are given two graphs of y = f(x) and y = g(x) then you are expected to know how to sketch y = f(g(x)). See this year’s HSC for Advanced.
 

5uckerberg

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In general, if you are given two graphs of y = f(x) and y = g(x) then you are expected to know how to sketch y = f(g(x)). See this year’s HSC for Advanced.
This is just from what I know the function of a function, replace with the equation given and then let f(...) where ... is the equation and then sub that new function into what is.
 

yanujw

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is the above transformation tested in exams? (eg. given a curve f(x) drawn out, sketch the transformation y = ln f(x)?) it's not in the textbooks i use for school and i've only seen it appear in my tutoring qns and i think once in a school paper ages ago but that was it
It is not part of the further graphs topic set of transformations in ext 1, if that is what you meant.
 

Trebla

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This was in this year's Mathematics Advanced HSC.
1666793058157.png

In my mind, if a composite function graph is examinable in Advanced (which seems to suggest they can even ask to sketch y = ln f(x) in Advanced) what's the point of having all these below in Extension 1?
1666793226337.png
They are literally specific examples of y=f(g(x)) lol (albeit with inverse versions)
 

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