Welcome to Westonci.ca, where finding answers to your questions is made simple by our community of experts. Experience the ease of finding reliable answers to your questions from a vast community of knowledgeable experts. Get detailed and accurate answers to your questions from a dedicated community of experts on our Q&A platform.
Sagot :
Step-by-step explanation:
it does not matter, if you understand the equation itself. look at the graph ! what is the curve doing ?
I don't know the options of the pull-down menus, so I will give you my best guesses based on the facts :
the domain of a function is the set or interval of all valid x (or input) values.
the range of a function is the set of interval of all valid y (or functional result) values.
so, clearly, x is in the interval (-infinity, +infinity). which is therefore the domain.
please conduct the round brackets. they indicate that the specified interval limits are not included (as infinity is not a value, only a concept, and can never be reached).
and y is in the interval of (0, +infinity). which is therefore the range.
we have to use the round brackets also for 0, as the function will never deliver the value 0, but its tendency or limit goes there (but again, only in infinity, which will never be reached).
the function continuously decreases when x increases.
again, I am not sure what the options are here, and what your teacher wants to "hear".
Thank you for visiting our platform. We hope you found the answers you were looking for. Come back anytime you need more information. We hope our answers were useful. Return anytime for more information and answers to any other questions you have. Discover more at Westonci.ca. Return for the latest expert answers and updates on various topics.