This module discusses how it is possible to describe functions in four different ways: graphically, verbally, algebraically, and numerically.
Modern Calculus texts emphasize that a function can be expressed in four different ways.
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Verbal - This is the first way functions are presented in the function game: “Double and add six.”
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Algebraic - This is the most common, most concise, and most powerful representation:
. Note that in an algebraic representation, the input number is represented as a variable (in this case, an
).
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Numerical - This can be done as a list of value pairs, as
— meaning that if a 4 goes in, a 14 comes out. (You may recognize this as
points used in graphing.)
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Graphical - This is discussed in detail in the section on graphing.
These are
not four different types of functions: they are four different views of the same function. One of the most important skills in Algebra is converting a function between these different forms, and this theme will recur in different forms throughout the text.