1 / 29

Please close your laptops

Please close your laptops and turn off and put away your cell phones, and get out your note-taking materials . Today’s daily homework quiz will be given at the end of class. Section 3.6 Introduction to Functions. Equations in two variables define relations between the two variables.

briar
Download Presentation

Please close your laptops

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Please close your laptops and turn off and put away your cell phones, and get out your note-taking materials. Today’s daily homework quiz will be given at the end of class.

  2. Section 3.6Introduction to Functions • Equations in two variables define relations between the two variables. • There are also other ways besides equations to describe relations between variables, for example ordered pairs or set-to-set maps.

  3. A set of ordered pairs (x, y) is also called a relationbetween the x and y values. • The domain is the set of x-coordinates of the ordered pairs. • The range is the set of y-coordinates of the ordered pairs.

  4. Example Find the domain and range of the relation {(4,9), (-4,9), (2,3), (10,-5)} . Find the domain and range of the relation {(4,9), (-4,9), (2,3), (10,-5)} Find the domain and range of the relation {(4,9), (-4,9), (2,3), (10,-5)} • Domain is the set of all x-values: {4, -4, 2, 10}. • Range is the set of all y-values: {9, 3, -5}. Note: if an element (number) is repeated, it only appears in the list one time.

  5. Some relations are also functions. • A function is a set of ordered pairs in which each unique first component in the ordered pairs corresponds to exactly one second component.

  6. Example Given the relation {(4,9), (-4,9), (2,3), (10,-5)}, is it a function? • Since each element of the domain(x-values) is paired with only one element of the range (y-values), it is a function. Note: It’s okay for a y-value to be assigned to more than one x-value, but an x-value cannot be assigned to more than one y-value if the relation is a function. (Each x-value has to be assigned to ONLY one y-value).

  7. Example Given the relation {(4,9), (4,-9), (2,3), (10,-5)}, is it a function? • Since the number 4 of the domain(x-values) is paired with two different elements of the range (the y-values 9and -9), this relation isnot a function.

  8. Relations and functions can also be described by graphing their ordered pairs. • Graphs can be used to determine if a relation is a function. • If an x-coordinate is paired with more than one y-coordinate, a vertical line can be drawn that will intersect the graph at more than one point. • If no vertical line can be drawn so that it intersects a graph more than once, the graph is the graph of a function. This is the vertical line test.

  9. Example y x Use the vertical line test to determine whether the graph to the right is the graph of a function. Since no vertical line will intersect this graph more than once, it is the graph of a function.

  10. Example y x Use the vertical line test to determine whether the graph to the right is the graph of a function. Since no vertical line will intersect this graph more than once, it is the graph of a function.

  11. Example y x Use the vertical line test to determine whether the graph to the right is the graph of a function. Since a vertical line can be drawn that intersects the graph at every point, it is NOT the graph of a function.

  12. Note: An equation of the form y = c, where c is a constant (a fixed number), is a horizontal line and IS a function. Since the graph of a linear equation is a line, all linear equations are functions, except those whose graph is a vertical line. An equation of the form x = c is a vertical line and IS NOT a function.

  13. Example y x Use the vertical line test to determine whether the graph to the right is the graph of a function. Since vertical lines can be drawn that intersect the graph in two points, it is NOT the graph of a function.

  14. y Domain x Domain is [-3, 4] Range Range is [-4, 2] Determining the domain and range from the graph of a relation: Example: Find the domain and range of the relation graphed (in red) to the right. Use interval notation. (Note that this is a line SEGMENT that stops at definite endpoints, rather than an entire LINE with arrows at the ends indicating that is goes on forever at both ends.) A: Yes Q: Is this relation a FUNCTION?

  15. Example y Range x Domain is (-, ) Range is [-2, ) Domain Find the domain and range of the function graphed to the right. Use interval notation.

  16. Example y x Find the domain and range of the function graphed to the right. Use interval notation. Domain: (-, ) Range: (-, )

  17. Example y x Find the domain and range of the function graphed to the right. Use interval notation. Domain: (-, ) Range: [-2.5] (The range in this case consists of one single y-value.)

  18. Example y x Find the domain and range of the relation graphed to the right. Use interval notation. (Note this relation is NOT a function, but it still has a domain and range.) Domain: [-4, 4] Range: [-4.3, 0]

  19. Example y x Find the domain and range of the relation graphed to the right. Use interval notation. (Note this relation is NOT a function, but it still has a domain and range.) Domain: [2] Range: (-, )

  20. Problem from today’s homework: Answer: Domain is {-3, -1, 0, 2, 3} Range is {-3, -2} This relation IS a function.

  21. What about this one? Answer: Domain is {-3, -1, 0, 2, 3} Range is {-3, -2, 2} This relation IS NOT a function.

  22. Using Function Notation • In a two-variable equation, the variable y is a function of the variable x, if for each value of x in the domain, there is only one value of y. • Thus, we say the variable x is the independent variablebecause any value in the domain can be assigned to x. The variable y is the dependent variable because its value depends on x. • We often use letters such as f, g, and h to name functions. For example, the symbol f(x) means function of xand is read “f of x”. This notation is called functionnotation.

  23. This function notation is often used when we know a relation is a function and it has been solved for y. • For example, the graph of the linear equation y = -3x + 2 passes the vertical line test, so it represents a function. • Therefore we can use the function notationf(x) and write the equation as f(x) = -3x + 2. Note: The symbol f(x), read “f of x”, is a specialized notation that does NOT mean f• x (f times x).

  24. When we want to evaluate a function at a particular value of x, we substitute the x-value into the notation. • For example, f(2) means to evaluate the function f when x = 2. So we replace x with 2 in the equation. • For our previous example when f(x) = -3x + 2, f(2) = -3(2) + 2 = -6 + 2 = -4. • When x = 2, then f(x) = -4, giving us the ordered pair (2, -4).

  25. Example • Given that g(x) = x2 – 2x, find g(-3). Then write down the corresponding ordered pair. • g(-3) = (-3)2 – 2(-3) = 9 – (-6) = 15. • The ordered pair is (-3, 15).

  26. The assignment on this material (HW 3.6) Is due at the start of the next class session. Lab hours: Mondays through Thursdays 8:00 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Please remember to sign in on the Math 110 clipboard by the front door of the lab

  27. You may now OPEN your LAPTOPS and begin working on the homework assignment until it’s time to take the quiz on HW 8.1.

  28. You will have access to the online calculator on your laptop during this quiz. No other calculator may be used. Please open your laptops, log in to the MyMathLab course web site, and open Quiz 8.1. • IMPORTANT NOTE: If you have time left after you finish the problems on this quiz, use it to check your answers before you submit the quiz! • Remember to turn in your answer sheetto the TA when the quiz time is up.

  29. You may now OPEN your LAPTOPS and begin working on the homework assignment. We expect all students to stay in the classroom to work on your homework till the end of the 55-minute class period. If you have already finished the homework assignment for today’s section, you should work ahead on the next one or work on the next practice quiz/test.

More Related