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Last Updated Sep 26, 2025
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Notation
Example:
This is the domain we have chosen.
A sketch of this graph would look like this: (Note: This sketch shows the line starting from and increasing.)
However, we have only allowed the function f to be defined for .
(Note: Point at is marked, illustrating that the function starts from this point.)
Notice, to illustrate the graph continues forever, the line has just vanished off the grid.
Example of an Incorrect Domain for a Real Function:
Example 1:
Sketch: for and state its range.
The sketch shows a parabola opening upwards with its vertex at . This helps in determining the range.
Calculator Steps:
Example 2:
Find the range of .
Sketch shows the exponential function starting from .
The blue highlight indicates the part of the function of interest.
, indicating that for .
The range is the set of all values such that .
The function is defined by for . The graph of is shown above.
Thus, . The range of f is .
A function maps one set of numbers to another. The input is called the domain, the output set is called the range.
Example:
From the above, we can construct the statement:
(beyond the space)
maps real numbers to real numbers greater than or equal to .
Taking some specific values of mapping:
Domain:
Range:
For :
For example, .
Thus, the function is MANY-TO-ONE or MANY-ONE.
You can classify a function as many-to-one by drawing the function and drawing a horizontal line through the function.
Example:
Since the line intersects the curve twice, we can see graphically that one y value is obtained from many values.
Example of one-to-many:
One -value, e.g., , gives many -values (i.e., ).
Draw a vertical line to test for this. If the line cuts in more than one place at any point, the function is ONE-TO-MANY.
Conclusion: This function is Many-to-Many.
The significance of this is that a function that is Many-to-Many has no inverse. We cannot deduce a unique input from a given output.
Something is only strictly a function if it does not end "many," i.e., does end "one."
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