A zero of a function is a point at which the value of the function is zero. If you graph the function, it is a point at which the graph touches the x-axis.
If the graph of the function is a continuous line then the function is differentiable. Also if the graph suddenly make a deviation at any point then the function is not differentiable at that point . The slope of a tangent at any point of the graph gives the derivative of the function at that point.
This graph fails the vertical line test at x = 3This graph is not the graph of a function.
A graph represents a function if and only if every input generates a single output.
If the function is a straight line equation that passes through the graph once, then that's a function, anything on a graph is a relation!
No, a circle graph is never a function.
A zero of a function is a point at which the value of the function is zero. If you graph the function, it is a point at which the graph touches the x-axis.
sine graph will be formed at origine of graph and cosine graph is find on y-axise
Yes the graph of a function can be a vertical or a horizontal line
Yes the graph of a function can be a vertical or a horizontal line
If the graph of the function is a continuous line then the function is differentiable. Also if the graph suddenly make a deviation at any point then the function is not differentiable at that point . The slope of a tangent at any point of the graph gives the derivative of the function at that point.
Test it by the vertical line test. That is, if a vertical line passes through the two points of the graph, this graph is not the graph of a function.
A line. The derivative of a function is its slope. If the slope is a constant then the graph is a line.
The Mandelbrot graph is generated iteratively and so is a function of a function of a function ... and in that sense it is a composite function.
the graph is called a line
A sine graph!
A cubic graph!