I Registered My Domain Now What The Journey











>> YOUR LINK HERE: ___ http://youtube.com/watch?v=GQGFMUfr10M

MIT grad shows a surefire way to find the domain of any function. To skip ahead: 1) For POLYNOMIAL only, skip to time 0:45. 2) For FRACTION only, skip to time 1:44. 3) For SQUARE ROOT only, skip to 5:08. 4) For SQUARE ROOT ON BOTTOM of Fraction, skip to 8:44. 5) For SQUARE ROOT ON TOP of Fraction, skip to 10:09. Nancy formerly of MathBFF explains the steps. • For how to SOLVE QUADRATIC equations by FACTORING, jump to:    • How to Solve Quadratic Equations by F...   • For how to SOLVE INEQUALITIES, jump to:    • How to Solve Inequalities (NancyPi)   • Follow Nancy on Instagram!   / nancypi   • Twitter:   / nancypi   • For Domain, you just need to watch out for Square Roots and/or Fractions! • If your function is... • 1) a POLYNOMIAL (no square roots or fractions), i.e. f(x) = x^2 + 3x + 1, domain is all real numbers. • 2) a FRACTION (w/ no square root), i.e. f(x) = (2x+1)/(x^2+5x+6). Set bottom not equal to zero. Solve for x. • 3) a SQUARE ROOT (w/ no fraction), i.e. f(x) = sqrt(x+1). Set part under root greater than or equal to zero . • 4) a FRACTION w/ A SQUARE ROOT ON BOTTOM, i.e. f(x) = (x^2+2x+3)/(sqrt(x+1)). Set part under root greater than zero. Solve the inequality. NOTE THE DIFFERENCE: You must set it greater than zero, not greater than OR EQUAL TO zero because we can't have zero (or square root of zero) in the denominator. • 5) a FRACTION w/ A SQUARE ROOT ON TOP, i.e. f(x) = (sqrt(x+1))/(x^2+4), i) Set the bottom not equal to zero solve; ii) Set what's under the root greater than or equal to zero solve; iii) Take intersection of your two solutions. • For more of my math videos, check out: http://nancypi.com

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