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.
Chat with our AI personalities
The domain is the set of values of the argument of the function or the values that the inputs can take. The range is the output values.
The domain and range are two different sets associated with a relationship or function. There is not a domain of a range.
The inverse of the inverse is the original function, so that the product of the two functions is equivalent to the identity function on the appropriate domain. The domain of a function is the range of the inverse function. The range of a function is the domain of the inverse function.
Yes, the domain must correspond to only one member of the range in order to be a function in a member of the domain goes to more than one member of the range it then is a relation and not a function A function is a relation but a relation isnt always a function
As shown, the function has neither range nor domain.
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.