Chapter 4. Functions

OBJECTIVES

When you have completed this chapter, you should be able to

  • Distinguish between relations and functions.

  • Recognize different forms of a function: equation, table of point pairs, verbal statement, graph.

  • Use functional notation.

  • Distinguish between implicit and explicit forms of an equation.

  • Rewrite a simple implicit equation in explicit form.

  • Substitute into a function.

  • Manipulate a function.

  • Manipulate functions by calculator.

  • Write a composite function.

  • Find the inverse of a function.

  • Find the domain and range of a function.

The equations we have been solving in the last few chapters have contained only one variable. For example,

x(x − 3) = x2 + 7

contains the single variable x.

But many situations involve two (or more) variables that are somehow related to each other. Look, for example, at Fig. 4-1, and suppose that you leave your campsite and walk a path up the hill. As you walk, both the horizontal distance x from your camp, and the vertical distance y above your camp, will change. You cannot change x without changing y, and vice versa (unless you jump into the air or dig a hole). The variables x and y are related.

In this chapter we study the relation between two variables and introduce the concept of a function. The idea of a function provides us with a different way of speaking about mathematical relationships. We could say, for example, that the formula for the area of a circle as a function of its radius is A = πr2.

Figure 4.1. FIGURE 4-1

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