A set of ordered pairs is a relation. Or Just simply "Coordinates"
It is the set on which the relation is defined to the set which is known as the range.
A relation doesn't have an "output value", in the sense that a function does. A set of values is either part of the relation, or it isn't.
All functions are relations but all relations are not functions.
The set of output values of a function or relation is the range
Domain
domain
The range
A set of ordered pairs is a relation. Or Just simply "Coordinates"
It is the codomain, often called the range.
The set of all the x-coordinate is called The Range. * * * * * Though more often, the x-coordinates are called the DOMAIN (and the y-coordinates are the RANGE).
It is the domain of the relation.
The Range is the set of all possible output values of a function or relation.
A relation R is a set A is called empty relation if no element of A is related to any element of R
When talking about the coordinate plain, the term domain refers to all values of "X".According to the relation and functions,Domain of a relation:If R is a relation from set A to B,then the set of all first co-ordinates of element R is called domain of RDomain of a function:Let f be the function from A to B ,set A is called the domain of f
they are the first set of paired elements
A relation is a mapping from elements of one set, called the domain, to elements of another set, called the range. The function of the three terms: relation, domain and range, is to define the parameters of a mapping which may or may not be a function.