This chapter explores the concepts of relations and functions in mathematics, focusing on how to connect pairs of objects from different sets and the significance of functions in describing these relationships.
Start with curated question sets, move into full module views when needed, and keep discovering related practice without losing your place in the chapter.
Identify a common misconception about Cartesian products.
If set A = {1, 2, 3} and set B = {x, y}, what is A × B?
Which of these represents a function from set A to set B?
Which characteristic does an ordered pair need to have?
Given two sets A = {x} and B = {y, z}, what is A × B?
What is the domain of the function f(x) = 1/(x - 2)?
What is the effect of composing two functions f(g(x))?
Which of the following defines a polynomial function?
If f(x) = x^2 and g(x) = 3x + 4, what is (f + g)(x)?
If R is a relation and it is transitive, which must hold?
Which of the following is true about a constant function?