Determine the domain of the following graph calculator


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Method and examples

Method
 
Domain of a function
 
 

  1. `y=(x-4)^2`
  2. `y=x^2-3`
  3. `y=2x-5`
  4. `y=(x+4)/(x-3)`
  5. `y=4/(3x-5)`
  6. `y=x/(2x^2+3x)`
  7. `y=(x^2-4x)/(x^2+4x-21)`
  8. `y=sqrt(x-8)`
  9. `y=sqrt(8-x)`
  10. `y=ln(x-8)`
  11. `y=sqrt(x+2)/(x^2-9)`
  12. `y=1/sqrt(x^2-4)`
  13. `y=1/(sqrt(x^2-4)(x-2))`
  14. `y=(-5-2x)/(1-x)`
  15. `y=(-2,1),(-1,3),(2,1),(3,2)`
  16. `y=(1,10),(2,10),(3,10)`

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Determine the domain of the following graph calculator
Determine the domain of the following graph calculator
Determine the domain of the following graph calculator
Determine the domain of the following graph calculator
Determine the domain of the following graph calculator
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How do I find the domain of a graph?

Another way to identify the domain and range of functions is by using graphs. Because the domain refers to the set of possible input values, the domain of a graph consists of all the input values shown on the x-axis. The range is the set of possible output values, which are shown on the y-axis.

How do you find the domain?

Let y = f(x) be a function with an independent variable x and a dependent variable y. If a function f provides a way to successfully produce a single value y using for that purpose a value for x then that chosen x-value is said to belong to the domain of f.

What is a domain calculator?

The domain calculator allows you to take a simple or complex function and find the domain in both interval and set notation instantly.

What is the domain of this function?

The domain of a function is the set of all possible inputs for the function. For example, the domain of f(x)=x² is all real numbers, and the domain of g(x)=1/x is all real numbers except for x=0.