Math Solver
Glide Reflection
Studio
Geometry Hub / Transformations / Glide Reflection
07.06 • Transformations

Glide Reflection

Combine a slide with a mirror flip and study how one compound motion creates a new image while still preserving distance.

Interactive diagram Live labels and measurements Worked examples PNG graph downloads
Glide Reflection
Interactive diagram

Glide Reflection Diagram

Move the figure along the glide direction, then compare the reflected image across the glide line to see the two-step motion as one transformation.

Use the movable diagram to see what defines glide reflection, how the labels relate to the figure, and what stays true as the board changes.

Definition: A glide reflection combines a translation with a reflection.
Detailed definition

Understanding Glide Reflection

A glide reflection is a composition of a translation and a reflection, with the translation running parallel to the line of reflection. In the plane it is one of the standard distance-preserving motions, even though it is built from two steps.

Because the motion includes a reflection, the image reverses orientation. Because it also includes a translation, the image does not sit directly across the mirror line the way a plain reflection would.

This page keeps the glide line, the slide direction, and the reflected image visible together so you can read the full motion as one geometric operation instead of mistaking it for a simpler move.

Key facts

Important ideas to remember

  • A glide reflection combines a translation with a reflection.
  • A glide reflection is an isometry, so lengths and angle measures are preserved.
  • The translation part must run parallel to the reflection line; otherwise the composition describes a different transformation.
  • Applying the same glide reflection twice results in a pure translation, which is one reason it appears in repeating border patterns.
Where it is used

Where glide reflection shows up

  • Use glide reflection when studying frieze patterns, footprints, decorative borders, and repeating designs.
  • Use it in symmetry classification where neither a plain reflection nor a plain translation alone explains the pattern.
  • Use it to understand how compound transformations can still preserve distance.
Common mistakes

What to watch out for

  • Do not reduce a glide reflection to an ordinary reflection if the image has also shifted along the line.
  • Do not use a glide direction that is not parallel to the reflection line.
  • Do not forget that the motion reverses orientation because reflection is one of its components.
Worked examples

Glide Reflection examples

Use these worked examples to see the idea in a clean diagram first, then in the kind of reasoning students usually need for classwork, homework, or test practice.

Example 1

Example 1: Identifying glide reflection from the mapped figure

Use the visible change between the original and image to name the transformation before writing a coordinate rule.

  • Find the original figure first.
  • Compare its position, orientation, and size with the image.
  • Use that comparison to name the motion.

Result: The transformation is read from the geometry of the mapping itself.

Example 2

Example 2: Writing the coordinate story of glide reflection

Move from the picture to the language of vectors, centers, reflections, or scale factors only after the motion is clear.

  • Read how key points move.
  • Describe the motion in words.
  • Translate that motion into the coordinate description that fits the page.

Result: The symbolic rule makes sense because it grows out of the visible change on the graph.

For

Why this page helps

This page helps because glide reflection is easy to miss when students look only for a plain reflection or a plain translation. Seeing both steps together makes the compound transformation much easier to recognise.

Do

What you can do here

  • Watch the slide-and-flip happen together so the compound motion becomes easier to recognise.
  • Compare glide reflection with plain reflection and plain translation on the same coordinate board.
  • Keep a clean example of a glide-reflection pattern for later symmetry study.
Learning outcome

What this page helps you do

These takeaways are meant to help you recognize the idea faster, read diagrams more accurately, and use the topic with more confidence in real problems.

1

Glide Reflection

Recognise glide reflection as a genuine named motion instead of a confusing mixed move.

2

Glide Reflection

Read repeating patterns and border symmetries with better precision.

3

Glide Reflection

Understand how compound transformations can preserve distance while still changing orientation.

07

Back to Transformations

Return to the category page to open another concept in transformations.

ST

Geometry Construction Studio

Use a dedicated geometry drawing board for points, segments, rays, lines, angles, circles, triangles, rectangles, pencil sketches, and virtual measuring tools.

07.05

Previous: Stretch

A stretch changes one direction more than another.