Given -f(x), how do you describe the transformation?

1 Answer
Dec 31, 2016

A reflection about the x-axis.

Explanation:

For any function f, its output at any given input x is just f(x).

When we take that output f(x) and make it negative (i.e. -f(x)), we're just flipping the sign of the output—positives become negatives, and vice versa.

Let's say that when x=3, we have f(x)=5.
Thus, when x=3, we have "-"f(x)="-"5.

All that happens is the sign of the output value changes—points that were once above the x-axis are now below, with no shift left or right.

This is simply stated as a reflection where the mirror is the x-axis, also called a reflection about the x-axis.