How do you graph y=log_4x?

1 Answer

See below:

Explanation:

Graphs of log and ln are all roughly similar - they have a negative asymptote as it approaches 0 from the right, no negative values, and the graph slowly heads off towards infinity. The key is to find a value or two of (x,y) that can anchor the graph and make it useful.

What might those values be here?

We know that y=log_4x is the same expression as 4^y=x. We need x>0, so let's see what we can do with x=1 - that gives us y=0. We also can have (4,1)

And so the graph will look like this (this is y=log_10x) with the points (1,0),(10,1):

graph{logx [-10, 10, -5, 5]}

but in our case it'll have the points (1,0),(4,1), as seen in this short video (sorry, but I don't know how to do it with the Socratic graphing tool!):

graphing of log_4x