By: IsaBella Combs. Section One: Relation and Functions Domain: a set of all first coordinates....
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Transcript of By: IsaBella Combs. Section One: Relation and Functions Domain: a set of all first coordinates....
![Page 1: By: IsaBella Combs. Section One: Relation and Functions Domain: a set of all first coordinates. (x-coordinates) Range: a set of all second coordinates.](https://reader036.fdocuments.net/reader036/viewer/2022082818/56649eab5503460f94bb053d/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
By: IsaBella Combs
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Section One: Relation and Functions
Domain: a set of all first coordinates. (x-coordinates)Range: a set of all second coordinates.(y-coordinates)Relation: set of ordered pairs.Ordered Pair: a pair of coordinates written in (x,y) formFunction: a relation in which exactly each element off the domain is paired with exactly one element of the domain.One-To-One: Function: function were each element of the range is paired with exactly one element of the domain.
Vocabulary:
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Example of ordered pairs:
Domain and x-coordinate
Range andy-coordinate
X
Y
2
4
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(6,4) , (2,-4) , (8,1) , (0,3) X Y
6 4
2 -4
8 1
0 3
* This is a one-to-one function because all the x elements and the y elements match up!
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Linear equations
* A linear equation has no operations other than addition, subtraction, and multiplication of a variable by a constant.* A variable cannot be under a radical.The graph of a linear equation is always a line.* A linear equation cannot contain variables with exponents greater than one.* The variables cannot be multiplied together or appear in a denominator.
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Linear Equation Example:
4x + 4y = 8
First step is to isolate "x" to one side of the equation by adding 4y to both sides:
4x - 4y + 4y = 8 + 4y4x = 8 + 4y
Second step is to divide both sides by 4:
4x / 4 = (8 + 4y) / 4x = 2 + y
Check your work with the original equation
4 * (2 + y) - 4y = 88 + 4y - 4y = 88 = 8
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A linear function is a function whose ordered pairs satisfy a linear equation.
Linear Functions:
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Slope = RiseRun
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The slope of a line is the ratio of the change in y-coordinates to the corresponding change in x-coordinates.Rate of change measures how much a quantity changes, on average, relative to the change in another quantity, often time.
Slope Examples: