Difference between revisions of "Toolkit Functions"

From Department of Mathematics at UTSA
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 3: Line 3:
 
<math> f(x) = c </math>
 
<math> f(x) = c </math>
 
the domain consists of all real numbers; there are no restrictions on the input. The only output value is the constant <math> c </math>, so the range is the set <math>\{c\}</math> that contains this single element. In interval notation, this is written as <math>[c,c]</math>, the interval that both begins and ends with <math>c</math>.
 
the domain consists of all real numbers; there are no restrictions on the input. The only output value is the constant <math> c </math>, so the range is the set <math>\{c\}</math> that contains this single element. In interval notation, this is written as <math>[c,c]</math>, the interval that both begins and ends with <math>c</math>.
Domain: <math> \( -\infty,\infty\) </math>
+
 
Range: [c, c]
+
Domain: <math> ( -\infty ,\infty ) </math>
 +
 
 +
Range: <math>[c, c]</math>
  
 
==Resources==
 
==Resources==

Revision as of 12:47, 4 October 2021

Constant Function

For the constant function the domain consists of all real numbers; there are no restrictions on the input. The only output value is the constant , so the range is the set that contains this single element. In interval notation, this is written as , the interval that both begins and ends with .

Domain:

Range:

Resources