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Russo's charges $15 for a large pizza. The delivery charge is $2.50. On Saturday there is a 1/2 off pizza special. Write an equation to represent the transformation ie: g(x) = f(x)...

User Jesperlind
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1 Answer

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Here's the problem-solving process for this:

1. Firstly, let's determine the cost of buying pizza on a regular day, represented by function f(x).
The cost of x pizzas on a regular day would be the cost of each pizza multiplied by the number of pizzas plus the delivery charge.
Therefore: f(x) = pizza_cost * x + delivery_charge

2. On Saturdays, Russo's has a 1/2 off special, so the cost of each pizza is halved.
The cost of x pizzas on a Saturday is therefore the discounted cost of each pizza multiplied by the number of pizzas plus the delivery charge.
This can be represented as an equation g(x) = discount * pizza_cost * x + delivery_charge

3. To find the transformation from f(x) to g(x), we need to express g(x) in terms of f(x).
By rearranging the equation for g(x) into a form that reflects f(x) we could get to:
g(x) = discount * f(x) + delivery_charge - delivery_charge

4. Simplifying, we find that delivery charges cancel each other out, leaving us with the transformation:
g(x) = discount * f(x)

5. In our case, the discount is half-off, so the equation of transformation from the regular day price function to the discounted Saturday price function is:
g(x) = 0.5*f(x)

This means that the Saturday price for any number of pizzas is half of what it would normally cost on any other day.

User Jim Castro
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