-- Make a vertical column of counting numbers, with ' 1 ' at the top, going down
as far as you like.
-- Next to it, make an exact copy of the same list, with each number on one list
copied to the other list.
-- Write 'X' at the top of one list. Write 'Y' at the top of the other list.
-- Now grab the entire 'X'-list, and shift the whole thing DOWN, exactly one number.
Now the '1' on the x-list is next to the '2' on the 'y'-list, and the 100,000 on the 'x'-list
is next to the 100,001 on the 'y'-list.
-- You now have a table of ordered pairs, or I/O, for the function [ Y = X + 1 ] .
X Y
0 1
1 2
2 3
3 4
------
------
n n+1
------
------
If every input has an output. If two outputs are the same, they must have the same input.
hftc
You draw a rectangle and then you divide it into to 2 equal parts (split it down the middle). After you do that you label the input side x and the output side y. And now you got an input output chart.
Input (g) Output (h) 0 0 1 7 2 14 3 21 ...and so forth.
Input Output 0 1 1 0
50
a table organizing the input rule output of a function
If you use an input output table, domain is the input.
If every input has an output. If two outputs are the same, they must have the same input.
Yukio Kaneko has written: 'Input output table and input output analysis' -- subject(s): Input-output analysis, Input-output tables 'Sangyo renkan no keizai bunseki'
No, because then the output would be the same as the rest of the output(s).
There are an infinite possible answer. Among the simpler ones is: Output = Input - 2
A table in which you put in a number and out comes another number. Usually more than one groups of numbers. And almost ALWAYS follows a rule such as: Input x3=Output or Input -23= Output Input | Output 2 | 4 10 | 20 16 | 32 In this table you can see that the rule is Input x2 = Output Hope This helped!
An input/output table works like this:You input something, and through a function, it outputs something else!Say I Had a function that is: input+2If I were to input 5, It would output 7All an input/output table does is displays a couple examples of multiple inputs with their outputs! Put tables only operate on one function....Example:Function: Input x 5 + 3INPUTS - OUTPUTS----------------------1 - 82 - 133 - 186 - 3310 - 53
hftc
by analyzing your three input logic network
You draw a rectangle and then you divide it into to 2 equal parts (split it down the middle). After you do that you label the input side x and the output side y. And now you got an input output chart.