notes/education/math/MATH1050/Domain.md
2024-08-28 10:39:34 -06:00

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# Examples
Given the below problem, the two equations can't simplified further. So to find the domain, you need to look for the domain where they're both valid, eg $[-2, 5]$.
$$ \sqrt{x+2} + \sqrt{5-x} $$
The below example has a domain of $[-2, 5)$ because $x$ cannot equal 0 for the denominator
$$ \frac{\sqrt{x+2}}{\sqrt{5-x}} $$
Assuming $f(x) = \frac{2}{x-3}$, and $g(x) = \frac{5}{x+1}$, $(f\circ g)(x)$, you can find the domain by finding the domain for each function, then fully expanding it and seeing if any more unreachable numbers are included