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.
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.
The correct answer for this question is RANGE (APEX) hope this helps someone! :))
The range of a function is the set of all of the possible values that it can take on as an output value. You find the range by inspecting the function and seeing first what the domain is, and then what the range would be for that domain. The domain, then, is the set of all of the possible values that it can take on as an input value.
The range of a function is the set of all possible output values.
The Range is the set of all possible output values of a function or relation.
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.
Range
The co-domain or range.
That set is called the ranger of the function.
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.
The "range".
output
output
It is the codomain, often called the range.
The domain is the set of values of the input while the range is the set of output values.
The relationship between two variables is called a relation. A relation in which a set of input values maps onto a set of output values such that each input corresponds to at most one output is called a "function." Functions do not necessarily have to be lines; they do not even have to be exponential, or parabolic, or continuous. A bunch of scattered points or lines that meets the requirements can still be considered a function involving two variables.