Yes, if the range is the non-negative reals.
Because it farts
Both the Greatest Integer Function and the Absolute Value Function are considered Piece-Wise Defined Functions. This implies that the function was put together using parts from other functions.
That is called the "absolute value" of the number. For example:The absolute value of 5 is 5.The absolute value of -5 is also 5.That is called the "absolute value" of the number. For example:The absolute value of 5 is 5.The absolute value of -5 is also 5.That is called the "absolute value" of the number. For example:The absolute value of 5 is 5.The absolute value of -5 is also 5.That is called the "absolute value" of the number. For example:The absolute value of 5 is 5.The absolute value of -5 is also 5.
no number; absolute value is always positive. The absolute value of a negative number is positive. For example absolute value of -4 is +4
piecewise
Piecewise, linear, exponential, quadratic, Onto, cubic, polynomial and absolute value.
A piecewise function is a function defined by two or more equations. A step functions is a piecewise function defined by a constant value over each part of its domain. You can write absolute value functions and step functions as piecewise functions so they're easier to graph.
Because it farts
Linear
Both the Greatest Integer Function and the Absolute Value Function are considered Piece-Wise Defined Functions. This implies that the function was put together using parts from other functions.
That is called the "absolute value" of the number. For example:The absolute value of 5 is 5.The absolute value of -5 is also 5.That is called the "absolute value" of the number. For example:The absolute value of 5 is 5.The absolute value of -5 is also 5.That is called the "absolute value" of the number. For example:The absolute value of 5 is 5.The absolute value of -5 is also 5.That is called the "absolute value" of the number. For example:The absolute value of 5 is 5.The absolute value of -5 is also 5.
no number; absolute value is always positive. The absolute value of a negative number is positive. For example absolute value of -4 is +4
y = 1/x
piecewise
The absolute value of 19 is 19. If x is positive , absolute x equals x.
An absolute value is the magnitude of a real number without regard to its sign. This means that first you do the functions that are inside the absolute value signs. Then you take whatever you have left and look at that number, regardless if it is negative or positive. |7|=7 |8|=8 |7-8|=1 |8-7|=1
You can have #include after Stdio.h ...it has so many built in mathematical functions like CIRCULAR FUNCTIONS, ABSOLUTE VALUE and more..Sadly, built-in functions and library functions are different things... there are no built-in functions in C (except for sizeof, which isn't an actual function).