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Encyclopedia > Range of a function

In mathematics, the range of a function is the set of all values produced by a function. Sometimes called the image.


Given a function , the set f(A) is called the range of f. The range is not to be confused with the codomain B. Generally the range is only a subset of the codomain.


Example

Let the function f be a function on the real numbers:

defined by

The codomain of f is R, but clearly f(x) never takes negative values, and thus the range is in fact the set R+—non-negative reals, i.e. the interval [0,∞):

See also

codomain, domain (mathematics), injective function, surjective function, bijective function


  Results from FactBites:
 
Range (disambiguation) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (143 words)
Range (mathematics), the set of all output values of a function.
Range (biology), the geographical area where a species can be found.
Range (music), the set of notes a musical instrument can play, or used in a piece of music.
Range (mathematics) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (239 words)
In mathematics, the range of a function is the set of all "output" values produced by that function.
The range should not be confused with the codomain B.
The range is a subset of the codomain, but is not necessarily equal to the codomain, since there may be elements of the codomain which are not elements of the range.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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