Functions
Learn the basic concepts of functions. Deepen your understanding of variables, function definitions, and domains through concrete examples.
- Letters like and above that can take various values are called variables .
- When the value of one variable is determined, and the value of is uniquely determined in correspondence with it, we say that is a function of .
- The range of values that a variable can take is called the domain .
- The domain can be expressed using inequalities, such as .
Relationships Between Quantities That Change Together
Example 1
Let's consider making a box using a square with a side length of 16cm.
How to make the box
- Cut out squares of the same size from the four corners of a square paper with a side length of 16cm
- Fold the paper along the dotted lines, tape the overlapping edges together to make a box without a lid
Let cm be the side length of the square to be cut out, and cm be the side length of the bottom of the box. Try moving the slider in the figure below to change the value of . You'll see that changes along with and can take various values.
Let's put the changes in as changes into a table and graph to capture their characteristics.
We can also express the relationship between and with an equation. Expressing it with an equation makes it very convenient to easily know how the value of changes when the value of changes.
Example 2
Next, in the box-making in Example 1, let cm² be the area of the bottom of the box. How does cm² (the area of the bottom of the box) change as the value of changes?
At this time, the pattern of changes in and can be shown in a table and graph like this. What is the correspondence relationship between and ?
The relationship between and can be expressed by this equation:
This is called a quadratic function, but quadratic functions are studied in the 9th grade, so you don't need to remember this term at the 7th-grade level.
- Letters like and above that can take various values are called variables .
- When the value of one variable is determined, and the value of is uniquely determined in correspondence with it, we say that is a function of .
Range of Values a Variable Can Take
Example 3
The following table shows data on temperature and the number of cold drinks sold at a certain store in a certain country. What happens to the number of cold drinks sold when the temperature rises? Or conversely, what happens when the temperature drops?
When we plot this data on a graph, it seems to form a straight line, and the relationship between and can be expressed by the equation .
However, here represents temperature, so is a value like possible...? If the historical lowest temperature in the area where this data was taken is and the highest is , it's reasonable to consider that the range of values can take is from to . This range of values that a variable can take is called the domain .
- The range of values that a variable can take is called the domain .
- The domain can be expressed using inequalities, such as .