How do you graph y=ln(x+1)?

1 Answer
Jan 19, 2017

Shift the graph of ln(x) to the left by 1

Explanation:

graph{ln(x+1) [-5, 5, -5, 5]}

Remember that since ln(x) and ex are inverse functions ln(ex)=x.

Because if y=ln(x) then y=0 if and only if ln(x)=0. Since e0=1 then ln(e0)=ln(1)=0. So when we change the function to y=ln(x+1), we have that y=0=ln(1)=ln(0+1) So the x-intercept shifts to the left. Just like the x-intercept shift, the entire graph shifts to the left.