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Day 1 · Free to try

Algebra 2

Day 1 is on us — the full thing. Read the lesson, then work all five problems, exactly like a real day. Unlock the other 13 days whenever you're ready.

Day 1 · Learn3 min read

Functions: Notation, Domain & Range

A function is a rule that takes one input and gives back exactly one output. We usually write the rule with function notation, like f(x) = 2x + 1 Here x is the input and f(x) (read "f of x") is the output. To evaluate, replace every x with the number you're given.

Example. For f(x) = 2x + 1, find f(3). Substitute: f(3) = 2(3) + 1 = 6 + 1 = 7. So the input 3 pairs with the output 7.

Domain and range

The domain is the set of all allowed inputs (the x values). The range is the set of all outputs (the f(x) values). Most functions accept every real number, but two situations shrink the domain:

  • You cannot divide by zero — so any x that makes a denominator 0 is excluded.
  • You cannot take a square root of a negative number — so keep whatever is under a √ at ≥ 0.

Finding a restricted domain

Look at the expression, set up the safety condition, and solve for x. For √(x − 4), you need x − 4 ≥ 0, which gives x ≥ 4. For 1/(x − 5), you need x − 5 ≠ 0, so x ≠ 5. Everything else stays in the domain. Range often comes from reading the graph or the lowest/highest output the rule can produce.

Now work today's 5 problems ↓
Q1
If f(x) = 4x − 9, what is f(−3)?
Q2
What is the domain of g(x) = √(x − 4)?
Q3
The graph shows a parabola f(x) with its lowest point at (−1, −4). What is the range of f?-6-4-2246-6-4-2246O
Q4
For f(x) = 2x + 3, find the value of x for which f(x) = 19.
Q5
What is the domain of h(x) = √(x + 5) / (x − 2)?
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