Recall that a function maps each input of a relation to exactly one output. Functions are typically represented in function notation, so the relationship between inputs and outputs are clear.
We have seen the equation for a linear function y=mx+b. By naming a linear function f, you can also write the function using function notation: f\left(x\right)=mx+b.
This is a way of saying that mx+b is a function of x. This is useful because it quickly tells us that we are working with a function where y can represent a relation that is not a function.
The notation f\left(x\right) is another name for y. If f is a function, and x is in its domain, then f\left(x\right) represents the output of f corresponding to the input x. You can use letters other than f to name a function, such as g or h.
To evaluate a function at a point is to calculate the output value at a particular input value:
If f\left(x\right)=-7x+9, then determine the value of f\left(1\right).
This is the same as stating to evaluate the function y=-7x+9 when x=1.
f\left(1\right)=-7\left(1\right)+9
f\left(1\right)=-7+9=2
Therefore, f\left(1\right)=2 for the function f\left(x\right)=-7x+9.
Consider the functionf\left(x\right) = \dfrac {x}{3}-5 where x is the independent variable.
Construct a table of values for the function at x=-3, \,0, \,9, \,12, \,27.
Evaluate the function for f\left(2\right).
Consider the graph:
Evaluate the function for f\left(-1\right).
Determine the value of x when f\left(x\right)=4.
Consider the function f\left(x\right)=3x-5 to answer the following:
Find the range when the domain is \{-3,0,11\}.
Find the domain when the range is \{-2,4,7\}.
Evaluate f(7) - f(2)
An equation where the output variable is isolated like y=mx+b can be written as a function in the form, f\left(x\right)=mx+b. We evaluate a function, written in function notation as f\left(c\right), by replacing all values of x with c and evaluating the expression.