Example
List the domain and range for the following table of values where
x is the input and
y is the output.
x |
y |
[latex]−3[/latex] |
[latex]4[/latex] |
[latex]−2[/latex] |
[latex]4[/latex] |
[latex]−1[/latex] |
[latex]4[/latex] |
[latex]2[/latex] |
[latex]4[/latex] |
[latex]3[/latex] |
[latex]4[/latex] |
Answer:
The domain describes all the inputs, and we can use set notation with brackets{} to make the list.
[latex-display]\text{Domain}:\{-3,-2,-1,2,3\}[/latex-display]
The range describes all the outputs.
[latex-display]\text{Range}:\{4\}[/latex-display]
We only listed [latex]4[/latex] once because it is not necessary to list it every time it appears in the range.
In the following video we provide another example of identifying whether a table of values represents a function, as well as determining the domain and range of the sets.
https://youtu.be/y2TqnP_6M1s
Example
Define the domain and range for the following set of ordered pairs, and determine whether the relation given is a function.
[latex]\{(−3,−6),(−2,−1),(1,0),(1,5),(2,0)\}[/latex]
Answer:
We list all of the input values as the domain. The input values are represented first in the ordered pair as a matter of convention.
Domain: {[latex]-3,-2,1,2[/latex]}
Note how we didn't enter repeated values more than once, it is not necessary.
The range is the list of outputs for the relation, they are entered second in the ordered pair.
Range: {[latex]-6, -1, 0, 5[/latex]}
Organizing the ordered pairs in a table can help you tell whether this relation is a function. By definition, the inputs in a function have only one output.
x |
y |
[latex]−3[/latex] |
[latex]−6[/latex] |
[latex]−2[/latex] |
[latex]−1[/latex] |
[latex]1[/latex] |
[latex]0[/latex] |
[latex]1[/latex] |
[latex]5[/latex] |
[latex]2[/latex] |
[latex]0[/latex] |
Answer
Domain: {[latex]-3,-2,1,2[/latex]}
Range: {[latex]-6, -1, 0, 5[/latex]}
The relation is not a function because the input [latex]1[/latex] has two outputs: [latex]0[/latex] and [latex]5[/latex].
In the following video we show how to determine whether a relation is a function, and define the domain and range.
https://youtu.be/kzgLfwgxE8g
Example
Define the domain and range of this relation and determine whether it is a function.
[latex]\{(−3, 4),(−2, 4),( −1, 4),(2, 4),(3, 4)\}[/latex]
Answer:
Domain: {[latex]-3, -2, -1, 2, 3[/latex]}
Range: {[latex]4[/latex]}
To help you determine whether this is a function, you could reorganize the information by creating a table.
x |
y |
[latex]−3[/latex] |
[latex]4[/latex] |
[latex]−2[/latex] |
[latex]4[/latex] |
[latex]−1[/latex] |
[latex]4[/latex] |
[latex]2[/latex] |
[latex]4[/latex] |
[latex]3[/latex] |
[latex]4[/latex] |
Each input has only one output, and the fact that it is the same output (4) does not matter.
Answer
Domain: {[latex]-3, -2, -1, 2, 3[/latex]}
Range: {[latex]4[/latex]}
This relation is a function.