another way to think of it...domain values are the x or input values,range values are the y or output values...
here's a trick to keep them straight....d before r....x before y
2007-08-09 09:11:17
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answer #1
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answered by plb5000 3
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If you have a FUNCTION y = f(x)
The DOMAIN is the portion of the x-axis in which this function is to be used.
The RANGE is the difference between the highest and lowest y-value for x-values in the domain.
2007-08-09 16:10:00
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answer #2
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answered by cattbarf 7
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For y = f(x)
The domain is the values of x you can substitute with it in the function
the range is the values of "y" you get by substituting with the domain
2007-08-09 16:09:07
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answer #3
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answered by ^-^ engineering student ! ^-^ 4
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domain=x value and range=y value, so for example if youre plotting (3,5) on a graph, 3 would be the domain and 5 would be the range
2007-08-09 16:08:03
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answer #4
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answered by tracy 3
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domain are all the values you input into a function/equation that then give you a specific output. that output is the range.
2007-08-09 16:05:46
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answer #5
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answered by sunnie746 2
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domain is the "x" value.
range is the "y" value
2007-08-09 16:11:11
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answer #6
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answered by dogpurpleny 1
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