domain
That would be the domain.
The range is the set of all possible outputs values for the function when given inputs from the domain.
the domain of the function
They are called the arguments of the function.
Domain
There are two sets for any given function, the domain and the range. The range is the set of outputs and the set of inputs is the domain.
domain
That would be the domain.
The range is the set of all possible outputs values for the function when given inputs from the domain.
It's domain.
The domain of a function encompasses all of the possible inputs of that function. On a Cartesian graph, this would be the x axis. For example, the function y = 2x has a domain of all values of x. The function y = x/2x has a domain of all values except zero, because 2 times zero is zero, which makes the function unsolvable.
the domain of the function
The set of all values that a function will return as outputs is called the *range* of the function.
They are called the arguments of the function.
The domain is the set of values that x may take that gives back an answer that makes sense. The range is the set of values that are possible results of the function. the "log" function does not accept 0 or negative values on its domain and returns negative, zero and positive numbers (ie all real values). The next function does not appear properly but you could figure it out
NAND