Just like brightsky did before me, I'm going to take this in steps:
1. Put it in terms of a function we know.
2. Apply appropriate transformations, including the modulus composition.
3. Apply any final transformations.
Hey Euler back on this question.
first attachment: i'm not sure how to graph these type of questions? i know how to graph absolute value functions but not those with it to the power. (answer is second attachment, im not sure how they drew that, looks kinda like a parabola, why?)
Consider
=e^{|x-1|}+4)
. Let's do this in steps:
1. Sketch e^x. This is our basic function, we know how to sketch this.
2. Now is the appropriate time to apply the modulus transformation - so, we sketch g(|x|) (g(x)=e^x), using what I showed you earlier.
3. Now we just need to apply the translations - which is one in the position x direction, and 4 in the positive x direction.
third attachment: the equation is y = |e^x - 1|, i see how theres a reflection in the x axis hence the new asymptote is y=1. lets say the equation was y = |e^x - 1| + 3, would the new asymptote be y= 4 now?, how do we know if the graph is above or below the asymptote? e.g. originally it was below but after the translation etc a part of it is above and shows asymptotic behaviour being above it.
1. This one's a lot easier than before - once again, we start with y=e^x.
2. Now, we translate it one down, giving us f(x)=e^x-1. Now, we do |f(x)| as I showed earlier, and obtain our graph.
3. In your example, yes, you would then translate the entire graph up 3 - leading to a y=4 asymptote.
The reason we know that it approaches the asymptote from the bottom, is because before the reflection it approached it from the top. Then, when you've reflected it, it starts to approach from the bottom, because reflections do things like that.

Remember how the shape changes between y=e^x and y=-e^x?