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  2. Domain of a function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domain_of_a_function

    In mathematics, the domain of a function is the set of inputs accepted by the function. It is sometimes denoted by or , where f is the function. In layman's terms, the domain of a function can generally be thought of as "what x can be". [1] More precisely, given a function , the domain of f is X. In modern mathematical language, the domain is ...

  3. Function composition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Function_composition

    Properties. The composition of functions is always associative —a property inherited from the composition of relations. [1] That is, if f, g, and h are composable, then f ∘ (g ∘ h) = (f ∘ g) ∘ h. [2] Since the parentheses do not change the result, they are generally omitted.

  4. Bijection, injection and surjection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bijection,_injection_and...

    general. In mathematics, injections, surjections, and bijections are classes of functions distinguished by the manner in which arguments (input expressions from the domain) and images (output expressions from the codomain) are related or mapped to each other. A function maps elements from its domain to elements in its codomain.

  5. Surjective function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surjective_function

    In mathematics, a surjective function (also known as surjection, or onto function / ˈɒn.tuː /) is a function f such that, for every element y of the function's codomain, there exists at least one element x in the function's domain such that f(x) = y. In other words, for a function f : XY, the codomain Y is the image of the function's ...

  6. Gradient - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gradient

    The gradient of the function f(x,y) = −(cos 2 x + cos 2 y) 2 depicted as a projected vector field on the bottom plane. The gradient (or gradient vector field) of a scalar function f(x 1, x 2, x 3, …, x n) is denoted ∇f or ∇ → f where ∇ denotes the vector differential operator, del.

  7. Taylor's theorem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taylor's_theorem

    v. t. e. In calculus, Taylor's theorem gives an approximation of a -times differentiable function around a given point by a polynomial of degree , called the -th-order Taylor polynomial. For a smooth function, the Taylor polynomial is the truncation at the order of the Taylor series of the function.

  8. Subadditivity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subadditivity

    A subadditive function is a function:, having a domain A and an ordered codomain B that are both closed under addition, with the following property: ,, (+) + ().. An example is the square root function, having the non-negative real numbers as domain and codomain: since , we have: + +.

  9. Quadratic function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quadratic_function

    A quadratic function is the polynomial function defined by a quadratic polynomial. Before the 20th century, the distinction was unclear between a polynomial and its associated polynomial function; so "quadratic polynomial" and "quadratic function" were almost synonymous.

  1. Related searches which function has the same domain as y 2 startroot x endroot n t 3

    which function has the same domain as y 2 startroot x endroot n t 3 29