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A transformation is fundamentally a function, but in linear algebra, it's visualized as an input vector moving to an output vector []. To grasp the entirety of a transformation, we imagine every point in space shifting to its corresponding output []. Instead of tracking individual arrows, conceptualizing vectors as points simplifies this by observing how entire regions of space deform []. Linear transformations, the focus of linear algebra, possess two key visual properties: lines must remain lines without curvature, and the origin must stay fixed []. Transformations that fail these criteria, such as those that curve lines or displace the origin, are not linear [].
Current Section Summary
Video summary will appear here after you start watching
A transformation is fundamentally a function, but in linear algebra, it's visualized as an input vector moving to an output vector []. To grasp the entirety of a transformation, we imagine every point in space shifting to its corresponding output []. Instead of tracking individual arrows, conceptualizing vectors as points simplifies this by observing how entire regions of space deform []. Linear transformations, the focus of linear algebra, possess two key visual properties: lines must remain lines without curvature, and the origin must stay fixed []. Transformations that fail these criteria, such as those that curve lines or displace the origin, are not linear [].