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Dear Parents
Dear Parents

1 - BrainMass
1 - BrainMass

Piecewise Defined Functions
Piecewise Defined Functions

exponential function
exponential function

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Revision

Domain - Epcc.edu
Domain - Epcc.edu

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x - mor media international

B-1 Relations and Functions
B-1 Relations and Functions

... Every point on a vertical line has the same xcoordinate, so a vertical line cannot represent a function itself, but can be used to determine whether a relation is a function by using the vertical line test on a graph. If no vertical line intersects a graph in more than one point, the graph represen ...
CS173: Discrete Math - University of California, Merced
CS173: Discrete Math - University of California, Merced

... f and f-1 form an identity function in any order Let f: A →B with f(a)=b Suppose f is one-to-one correspondence from A to B Then f-1 is one-to-one correspondence from B to A The inverse function reverse the correspondence of f, so f-1(b)=a when f(a)=b, and f(a)=b when f-1(b)=a • (f-1 ◦f)(a)=f-1(f(a) ...
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2.5 Graphs of Functions

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Function f Function

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Midterm Test - NUS Physics Department

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Week 5

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Name: Period ______ Sec5-3 #9-12all, 24

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FUNCTIONS, CONTINUED: SYMBOLIC REPRESENTATIONS

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Lecture 5

EXAMPLE 3 Graph a rational function of the form y
EXAMPLE 3 Graph a rational function of the form y

Lecture 10: What is a Function, definition, piecewise defined
Lecture 10: What is a Function, definition, piecewise defined

... • The set of numbers (or objects) to which we apply the function, A, is called the domain of the function. • The set of values of B which are equal to f (x) for some x in A is called the range of f . We have range of f = {f (x)|x ∈ A} In the example shown above where f (x) = x2 , we see that the va ...
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Revision

Limits and Continuity
Limits and Continuity

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Ch03 - Faculty

1.4 Function Notation
1.4 Function Notation

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Function (mathematics)



In mathematics, a function is a relation between a set of inputs and a set of permissible outputs with the property that each input is related to exactly one output. An example is the function that relates each real number x to its square x2. The output of a function f corresponding to an input x is denoted by f(x) (read ""f of x""). In this example, if the input is −3, then the output is 9, and we may write f(−3) = 9. Likewise, if the input is 3, then the output is also 9, and we may write f(3) = 9. (The same output may be produced by more than one input, but each input gives only one output.) The input variable(s) are sometimes referred to as the argument(s) of the function.Functions of various kinds are ""the central objects of investigation"" in most fields of modern mathematics. There are many ways to describe or represent a function. Some functions may be defined by a formula or algorithm that tells how to compute the output for a given input. Others are given by a picture, called the graph of the function. In science, functions are sometimes defined by a table that gives the outputs for selected inputs. A function could be described implicitly, for example as the inverse to another function or as a solution of a differential equation.The input and output of a function can be expressed as an ordered pair, ordered so that the first element is the input (or tuple of inputs, if the function takes more than one input), and the second is the output. In the example above, f(x) = x2, we have the ordered pair (−3, 9). If both input and output are real numbers, this ordered pair can be viewed as the Cartesian coordinates of a point on the graph of the function.In modern mathematics, a function is defined by its set of inputs, called the domain; a set containing the set of outputs, and possibly additional elements, as members, called its codomain; and the set of all input-output pairs, called its graph. Sometimes the codomain is called the function's ""range"", but more commonly the word ""range"" is used to mean, instead, specifically the set of outputs (this is also called the image of the function). For example, we could define a function using the rule f(x) = x2 by saying that the domain and codomain are the real numbers, and that the graph consists of all pairs of real numbers (x, x2). The image of this function is the set of non-negative real numbers. Collections of functions with the same domain and the same codomain are called function spaces, the properties of which are studied in such mathematical disciplines as real analysis, complex analysis, and functional analysis.In analogy with arithmetic, it is possible to define addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division of functions, in those cases where the output is a number. Another important operation defined on functions is function composition, where the output from one function becomes the input to another function.
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