Graph 1: Line Extending Both Directions
A line without endpoints extends forever in both directions.
- Vertical scan touches the graph at every
-value - No restrictions
Domain:
Graph 2: Ray Starting at a Point
A ray starts at
- Solid dot at
: the endpoint is included - Vertical scan touches the graph for all
Domain:
Graph 3: Bounded Curve with Closed Endpoints
A curve runs from
- Both endpoints included (solid dots)
- Vertical scan only touches graph between
and
Domain:
Graph 4: Curve with a Hole
Open circle at
Domain:
- At
, , , : function is defined - Only exactly
is missing
Graph 5: Function Has a Vertical Asymptote
A curve approaches but never touches the vertical line
is excluded — the function blows up there- Domain is all values except
Domain:
Graph 6: Only Isolated Dots Appear
The graph shows isolated dots at
- No curve — just individual, unconnected points
- Vertical scan only touches at exactly those
-values
Domain:
Check: Match Graph to Domain
Match each mini-graph to its domain:
- Graph A: parabola on
, solid endpoints - Graph B: curve, open circle at
- Graph C: dots at
only
Write each domain before the next slide.
Matching Answers and Dot Convention Summary
- Graph A:
— solid endpoints, both included - Graph B:
— open circle removes - Graph C:
— four isolated dots
Dot rule: Solid (●) = included · Open (○) = excluded
Graph and Formula Should Always Agree
When a function is given both ways, the domains should agree.
Graph: vertical asymptote at
Both methods agree: domain is
Continuous vs. Discrete: The Distinction
Continuous domain: all real values in an interval
- Examples: time, temperature, distance
- Graphed with a solid, connected curve
Discrete domain: only isolated, individual values
- Examples: people, tickets, correct answers
- Graphed with isolated dots
Bacteria Growth Shows a Continuous Domain
- Time
flows continuously — fractional hours are valid - Domain:
, continuous - Graph: solid curve starting at
Discrete: Bonus Points per Correct Answer
- Answers are integers:
- Domain is discrete — you can't get 2.5 correct
- Graph: isolated dots, NOT a connected line
Capstone: Water Taxi — All Four Perspectives
| Perspective | Domain | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Algebraic | All reals | Formula works for any |
| Contextual | Whole numbers, capacity limit | |
| Graph | 13 isolated dots | Not a line |
| Notation | Set-roster |
Check: What Is the Candle Domain?
Is this domain discrete or continuous?
What is the contextual domain?
Write your answer before the next slide.
Candle Burns Continuously from Zero to Twenty-Four
- Time flows continuously — fractional hours are valid
- Minimum:
- Candle burns out:
Contextual domain:
Three Ways to Identify a Function's Domain
| Perspective | Domain question | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Algebraic | What breaks the formula? | |
| Contextual | What inputs make sense? | |
| Graphical | Where does the graph exist? |
In modeling: contextual domain takes priority.
Key Takeaways from Deck Two
✓ Vertical scan: every
✓ Solid ● = included; open ○ = one excluded point
✓ Continuous → curve; Discrete → dots (never connect)
✓ Contextual domain takes priority in modeling
Up Next: Average Rate of Change
HSF.IF.B.6 — Average Rate of Change
With domain mastered, you can specify intervals precisely.
- Average rate of change over
requires knowing are in the domain - Contextual domain determines which intervals are meaningful
Domain is the foundation for everything that follows.