[(x,y)(x,y)(x,y)]
Where X is input and Y is output. Remember to pair them in order of greatest to least, and do not repeat same order pairs. Example being:
Dogs & Cats in 1 week at a shelter vs adopted
IN | OUT
--------------
2 | 4
2 | 4
2 | 4
5 | 6
1 | 0
8 | 4
10 | 25
[(10,25)(8,4)(5,6)(2,4)(1,0)]
You do not graph range and domain: you can determine the range and domain of a graph. The domain is the set of all the x-values and the range is is the set of all the y-values that are used in the graph.
The domain of a function is the set of values for which the function is defined.The range is the set of possible results which you can get for the function.
Domain: All Possible "x" values Range: All possible "y" values
The domain is the set of values of the input while the range is the set of output values.
The domain is, but the range need not be.
The domain is a subset of the values for which the function is defined. The range is the set of values that the function takes as the argument of the function takes all the values in the domain.
domain = x-values range = y-values for which x or y is a solution
Domain is the spectrum of values on the x-axis. Domain will be which x-values can be plugged into that equation and give an answer. Range is the same thing, but y-values. On the graph it will be the y-values that are included in the graph.
The domain consists of all values of x for which there is a point on the graph. Similarly, the range applies to all the y values.
The values of the range also tend to increase.
Domain is what you can plug into the function (possible x values for y=f(x) type functions) and range is the possible values you can get out (possible y values).
In algebra, the domain consists of all possible values for the x variable that could make the function work. The range is all of the possible values of the function, using each number in the domain.