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How does the graph of g(x) = x - 3 compare with the graph of the parent function, f(x) = x?

How does the graph of g(x) = x - 3 compare with the graph of the parent function, f-example-1
asked
User MrCooL
by
8.3k points

2 Answers

0 votes

Answer:

D. the graph of g(x) is shifted 3 units down

Explanation:

answered
User Nikunj Banka
by
8.2k points
2 votes

Answer:

The answer is D

Explanation:

One approach to this problem is to obtain the graph for the given equation.

We need to find every intersection those functions have with the axis 'x' and 'y'

starting with g(x)

g(x=0)=0-3, first point (0,-3) it iis the crossing point with 'x' axis

g(x)=0=x-3, second point (3,0) it iis the crossing point with 'y' axis

Lets do the same for f(x)

g(x=0)=0, this leads to the first point (0,0) it iis the crossing point with 'x' axis and also, with the 'y' axis

We dont need to find any other, since always y=x

By plotting we have the attached picture

Now you can see that g(x) differs from its parent function in that is shifted 3 units to the right, and also 3 units down.

How does the graph of g(x) = x - 3 compare with the graph of the parent function, f-example-1
answered
User Snowe
by
7.8k points

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