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Find the range of the function Find the x and y intercepts

Find the range of the function Find the x and y intercepts-example-1
Find the range of the function Find the x and y intercepts-example-1
Find the range of the function Find the x and y intercepts-example-2
Find the range of the function Find the x and y intercepts-example-3
User Nishu
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1 Answer

22 votes
22 votes

For the function f(x) to be greater than 0 (f(x) > 0), we need to identify those regions strictly above the x-axis.

From the graph, these regions are (in interval notation):


\begin{gathered} R_1=(-6,-1) \\ \\ R_2=(4,6\rbrack \end{gathered}

For each region there is an inequality:


\begin{gathered} R_1:-6\lt x\lt-1 \\ \\ R_2:4\lt x\leqslant6 \end{gathered}

The domain is the set of x-values the function takes. Then, from the graph, we can see that the function is defined from x = -7 to x = 6. The domain of f(x) is:


Dom_f={}\lbrace x|-7\leqslant x\leqslant6\rbrace

The range is the set of y-values the function takes. From the graph, we see that the function has a minimum of -8 and a maximum of 12. Then, the range is:


Ran_f={}\lbrace y|-8\leqslant y\leqslant12\rbrace

For the x-intercepts (points with y = 0), we have:


-6,-1,4

For the y-intercept (the point with x = 0):


-4

User Anton Rybalko
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