Translations

What is a Translation?

A translation shifts a graph without changing its shape or size.

Think of sliding a piece of paper across a table.


Vertical Shifts

f(x)+kf(x) + k

Add a constant outside the function to shift vertically.

  • k>0k > 0 → shift up
  • k<0k < 0 → shift down

Example: Start with f(x)=x2f(x) = x^2

  • f(x)+3=x2+3f(x) + 3 = x^2 + 3 → shift up 3
  • f(x)2=x22f(x) - 2 = x^2 - 2 → shift down 2

Every point moves up or down by the same amount.


Horizontal Shifts

f(xh)f(x - h)

Subtract a constant inside the function to shift horizontally.

  • h>0h > 0 → shift right
  • h<0h < 0 → shift left

Warning: This is backwards from what you might expect!

f(x3)f(x - 3) shifts right 3, not left.

f(x+2)f(x + 2) shifts left 2, not right.


Why is it backwards?

Think about when the output equals zero.

For f(x)=x2f(x) = x^2, we get f(0)=0f(0) = 0 at x=0x = 0.

For g(x)=(x3)2g(x) = (x - 3)^2, we get g(3)=0g(3) = 0 at x=3x = 3.

The vertex moved from x=0x = 0 to x=3x = 3. That’s a shift right.


Example: Start with f(x)=x2f(x) = x^2

  • f(x4)=(x4)2f(x - 4) = (x - 4)^2 → shift right 4
  • f(x+1)=(x+1)2f(x + 1) = (x + 1)^2 → shift left 1

Combining Shifts

You can shift both horizontally and vertically:

f(xh)+kf(x - h) + k

Example: g(x)=(x2)2+3g(x) = (x - 2)^2 + 3

This takes f(x)=x2f(x) = x^2 and:

  • Shifts right 2
  • Shifts up 3

The vertex moves from (0,0)(0, 0) to (2,3)(2, 3).


Quick Reference

TransformationEffect
f(x)+kf(x) + kShift up by kk
f(x)kf(x) - kShift down by kk
f(xh)f(x - h)Shift right by hh
f(x+h)f(x + h)Shift left by hh