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how don you find write the domain of a function
To write a thesis for gender inequality one would need to identify a narrow topic to discuss about gender inequality. One example would be, how gender inequality in the workplace hurts us all.
FromA function is a relation between a given set of elements called the domain and a set of elements called the co-domain. The function associates each element in the domain with exactly one element in the co-domain. The elements so related can be any kind of thing (words, objects, qualities) but are typically mathematical quantities, such as real numbers.An example of a function with domain {A,B,C} and co-domain {1,2,3} associates A with 1, B with 2, and C with 3. An example of a function with the real numbers as both its domain and co-domain is the function f(x) = 2x, which associates every real number with the real number twice as big. In this case, we can write f(5) = 10.
5n > 25
Well, it would be hard to write an inverse function of -4, since -4 is not a function in the first place.
no chit Sherlock
"Domain" means for what numbers the function is defined (the "input" to the function). For example, "x + 3" is defined for any value of "x", whereas "square root of x" is defined for non-negative "x". "Range" refers to the corresponding values calculated by the function - the "output" of the function. If you write a function as y = (some function of x), for example y = square root of x, then the domain is all possible values that "x" can have, whereas the range is all the possible values that "y" can have.
Yes, if you write something that way, it usually refers to a function. v(x) means that you have a function called "v", and that it somehow depends on a variable called "x".
2 is not equal to 17.
x <= 450
Google it, I dont know :P
r <= 5.