Analysishater101 said:
ok i am in serious trouble in my math class alos in spelling some of u might think of my word dier i don't think that's how you spell it but whatever. as i was saying i am totally lost in my class not to mention my homework

. Could someone just define function, domain, range, and how to figure all of these out. I also have a major problem with piece wise functions. I see no use for them expect to make me go bald from ecessively pulling my hair out

. anway if u were wondering I'm in analysis and i have a quiz tom which i will probably fail. I've been studying but i decided that i cannot do this alone. i know I'm really acting like a drama queen but i just can't figure this stuff out. so any help would be really really great. thanks.
Alright, I will try to explain these definitions, but you will have to keep in mind that these definitions are not standard; there are slight differences between the definitions of functions and ranges in different textbooks.
What is a function? A function is simply a rule that takes a number from one set of numbers, called the domain, and returns exactly one number from another set of numbers, called the range. So "doubling" is a function. You give it a number, say 4, and it uses some rule to give a number in return, 8 in this example. The domain in this case is all real numbers. This is because if you give any real number, the function will always be able to give a number in return. The range is also all real numbers. This is because if you pick any number, say 20, then there will always be a number that will give you 20 when you put it into the function(10). If you denote elements in the range by "y" and elements in the domain by "x", then the rule for the "doubling function" can be written as y=2x.
Now consider the "squaring function", y=x^2. In this case the domain is again all real numbers because, for any real number, there is exactly one number that is its square. But think about the range. 16 is in the range because there is a number, 4, that will give you 16 when you put it in the function. But look at -16. There is no number in the domain that will give you -16 when you square it. The range is all non-negative real numbers because only non-negative numbers come out of the function y=x^2.
It is important to note that each element of the domain must give
exactly one element in the range. Look at the relation y=\pm \sqrt{x}. Pick the number 4. Now clearly 2 satisfies this relation, but so does -2. Which one do you pick? This relation is not a function. A function is an exact rule and must tell you exactly which value in the range to pick for a given value in the domain. Here is a quick way to tell if a relation is a function by looking at the graph: The way you tell what value of y to pick for a given value of x is to look right above the value of x and see at what value of y it touches the graph. If you see that, when you look above any value of x in a vertical line, this line touches the graph more than once, you know the graph is not of a function. This is because it just gave you two values of y to choose from for a given value of x, which we said functions can not do.