Translating shapes on a grid
In maths, a translation is a fancy word for a slide. You move every point of a shape the same distance in the same direction. The shape doesn't turn, doesn't flip, doesn't grow — it just slides to a new place.
The four directions
On a coordinate grid, a translation always has two parts:
- a horizontal move — left or right along the x-axis,
- a vertical move — up or down along the y-axis.
A typical instruction looks like:
Translate the shape 3 squares right and 2 squares up.
That means every point of the shape moves +3 along x and +2 along y.
How to translate a shape
- Pick one corner of the shape and read its coordinates.
- Add the horizontal move to the x-coordinate, and the vertical move to the y-coordinate.
- Plot the new corner.
- Repeat for every corner of the shape.
- Join the new corners in the same order as the original.
The new shape is exactly the same size and shape as the old one — just in a different spot.
A worked example
A triangle has corners at (1, 1), (4, 1) and (1, 5). Translate it 3 squares right and 2 squares up.
For each corner, add (+3, +2):
- (1, 1) → (1 + 3, 1 + 2) = (4, 3).
- (4, 1) → (4 + 3, 1 + 2) = (7, 3).
- (1, 5) → (1 + 3, 5 + 2) = (4, 7).
The new triangle has corners at (4, 3), (7, 3) and (4, 7). Same triangle, slid right and up.
Going left or down
A move "to the left" subtracts from x. A move "down" subtracts from y. In Year 4 we make sure the shape stays in the first quadrant, so we never subtract enough to go below zero.
Translate the point (5, 4) two squares left and one square down.
- New x: 5 − 2 = 3.
- New y: 4 − 1 = 3.
- New point: (3, 3).
What translation does NOT do
A translation is just a slide. It does not:
- rotate the shape (turn it),
- reflect it (flip it like a mirror),
- stretch or shrink it.
After a translation the shape is identical in size, shape and orientation — only the position changes.
A puzzle
A square has corners at (1, 1), (3, 1), (3, 3) and (1, 3). After a translation it sits at (4, 5), (6, 5), (6, 7) and (4, 7). What was the translation?
Compare any one corner: (1, 1) became (4, 5).
- x changed from 1 to 4: that's +3 (3 right).
- y changed from 1 to 5: that's +4 (4 up).
Translation: 3 right and 4 up. The same change applies to all four corners.
Common mistakes
- Translating only one corner and forgetting the others.
- Adding to x but subtracting from y by accident. Read the question carefully — "3 right and 2 up" is +3 to x and +2 to y, both positive.
- Confusing translation with rotation. A translation never turns the shape. The orientation of the original and the translated copy is the same.
What's next
- Plotting coordinates — the basic skill behind translation
- Reading coordinates
- Back to the introduction