The graph of ( y = 2^x ) is reflected in the line ( y = x ), then stretched vertically by factor 3, then translated 2 units down. Find the equation of the resulting curve. Answer: Reflection in ( y=x ) gives inverse: ( y = \log_2 x ). Then vertical stretch ×3: ( y = 3 \log_2 x ). Then down 2: ( y = 3 \log_2 x - 2 ).
| Transformation | Algebraic Change | Effect on Graph | DSE Common Example | |----------------|------------------|----------------|--------------------| | | ( y = f(x - h) ) | Shift RIGHT by ( h ) (if ( h>0 )) | Quadratic vertex shift | | Translation (Vertical) | ( y = f(x) + k ) | Shift UP by ( k ) (if ( k>0 )) | Sine/cosine vertical shift | | Reflection (x-axis) | ( y = -f(x) ) | Flip over x-axis | Exponential decay reflection | | Reflection (y-axis) | ( y = f(-x) ) | Flip over y-axis | Even/odd function tests | | Scaling (Vertical) | ( y = a f(x) ) | Stretch/compress vertically | Amplitude change in trig graphs | | Scaling (Horizontal) | ( y = f(bx) ) | Compress/stretch horizontally | Period change in sin/cos | ⚠️ Common Pitfall in DSE: Horizontal transformations are counter-intuitive . ( y = f(x - 2) ) moves the graph right , not left. ( y = f(2x) ) compresses horizontally (period halves), not expands. Part 2: DSE-Style Exercise Progression We will build from simple recognition to complex composite transformations, mimicking DSE question difficulty. Exercise Set 1: Basic Identification (DSE Paper 2 Warm-up) Question 1: The graph of ( y = x^2 ) is transformed to ( y = (x + 3)^2 - 4 ). Describe the transformation.
Sketch ( y = |x^2 - 4| - 1 ). How many x-intercepts? transformation of graph dse exercise
Now go forth and transform every graph the DSE throws at you!
The graph of ( y = \cos x ) is transformed to ( y = 3\cos(2x - \pi) + 1 ). Describe the sequence. The graph of ( y = 2^x )
Introduction: Why Graph Transformations Matter in DSE In the Hong Kong DSE Mathematics examination, the ability to manipulate and interpret graphs is not merely a mechanistic skill—it is a visual language. Questions involving transformation of graphs appear consistently across Papers 1 (Conventional) and 2 (MCQ), as well as in the M2 Calculus paper.
The graph of ( y = f(x) ) is translated 3 units right and then reflected in the y-axis to become ( y = \sqrt4 - x^2 ). Find ( f(x) ). Then vertical stretch ×3: ( y = 3 \log_2 x )
Thus stationary points at ( x=0, 2 ). Trig graphs test horizontal scaling (period change) and vertical scaling (amplitude) most intensely.