Drongoski pretty much explained it. You gotta make it into the standard forms.You have 4 standard positions for your parabolae, viz:
1) (x - h)2 = 4a(y - k) (upright parabola)
2) (x - h)2 = -4a (y - k) ('downright' parabola)
3) (y - k) 2 = 4a(x - h) (sideways parabola - open to the right)
4) (y - k)2 = -4a(x-h) (sideways parabola - open to the left)
Your parabola s of type-3. It is helpful to rewrite it in the standard form of type-3:
(y - 0)2 = 4 x 2 x (x - [-2])
So your 3 parameters are: h = -2, k = 0, a = 2
i) So your vertex (h,k) is simply (-2,0)
ii) Your focal length a = 2; so your Focus is 2 units from the vertex along the line that divides the parabola into 2 equal halves (the axis of symmetry, which in this case is simply the x-axis) and inside the parabola.
So the focus is simply (0,0), the origin.
iii)Your directrix is the straight line perpendicular to the axis of symmetry (so it is parallel to the y-axis), that is 2 units away from the vertex, on the opposite side of the vertex from the focus.
so your directrix is simply the equation: x = -4
iv) you should be able to sketch the parabola now
Okay, let me try to explain it as easy as I can.I still don't get how to find the focus and the directrix, the equations Drongoski mentioned above confused me.
Okay I'm starting to get this now, but howcome you done 2 + 1 = 3 to find the focus? In my original post when the focal length of 2 was found, the focus was the y coordinate of the vertex minus the focal length of 2, but in your example you done something different?Okay, let me try to explain it as easy as I can.
For example, you get an equation like this:
I don't remember the equations fully, I just think it through. For an parabola that goes up, the y-values are increasing so 4a is positive and vice-versa for negative, and for the parabolas going to the right, the x-values are increasing so it's 4a is positive and vice versa for a parabolas going to the left.I'm getting a much better idea now, once I know the shape of the parabola I can find out the rest, but is there an easy way to know without knowing these equations?
1) (x - h)2 = 4a(y - k) (upright parabola)
2) (x - h)2 = -4a (y - k) ('downright' parabola)
3) (y - k) 2 = 4a(x - h) (sideways parabola - open to the right)
4) (y - k)2 = -4a(x-h) (sideways parabola - open to the left)