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portillj
Feb26-08, 02:37 PM
{} these brackets are going to represent the absolute value lines
the problem states
find the absolute extrema of the given function on each individual interval:
f(x)= {2x} - {x-2}
a) [0,1]
b) [-3, 4]

I know I need the derivative of the equation but it does not really give a good derivative since it would be f'(x)= 2 - {1}

sutupidmath
Feb26-08, 03:00 PM
well, first what is {2x} equal to when x is from [0,1], als owhat is the value of {x-2}, do the same thing in the other interval!

PingPong
Feb26-08, 03:44 PM
You could also break the function up into the intervals (-\infty,0), [0,2), and [2,\infty) and write f as a piecewise function. Then, you can find the derivative on each of those open intervals (remember that the derivative won't necessarily be defined at 0 and 2).

portillj
Feb26-08, 07:35 PM
how am i suppose to do tat

sutupidmath
Feb26-08, 08:09 PM
how am i suppose to do tat

Do u know how a piecewise defined function looks like? Well, to do that in this case you need to follow both my hints and also PingPong's hints!