Review of How to Graph a Quadratic
Find the vertex
first find the x value of this ordered pair. (x = -b/2a)
then (using that value) plug in to the equation to find the y coordinate
Find the axis (line) of symmetry – just use the x value of the vertex that is
x = -b/2a
draw the line of symmetry using a dotted or dashed line
Find 2 more points in an x y table (go either left OR right of the vertex and use 2 points close to the line of symmetry for the x, then plug into the equation to find the y values)
Find the 2 shadow (mirror) points by counting over from the axis at the exact same y value
Draw a U (not a V) through the points. Extend it past and put arrows at the end
Remember to label the x and y axes and put arrows on the axes.
Function vs. Relations: Functions are special relations where there is a unique x for each y
Therefore, there will never be 2 x’s that will repeat and if you use a vertical line on the graph, it will only hit one point on the graph.
Domain vs. Range:
DOMAIN:
The domain for any quadratic function is ALL REAL NUMBERS
RANGE:
The range depends on where the vertex is and whether the quadratic is a smile or a frown.
Generally, it will be of the form: y such that y is either greater than or equal to (≥ ) or less than or equal to (≤) the y value of the vertex.
f(x) is just a different way of saying y. What is better about it? Without seeing the work before the solution, you can actually tell the x value as well as the y value in the solution.
For example, if the solution is f(-3) = 12 you know that the point is (-3, 12)
Compare that to the solution y = 12. For that solution, you would not know the x value unless you look back in the problem.
Check out Purplemath.com Great website for help
Saturday, April 4, 2009
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment