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Mathematics 17 Online
OpenStudy (anonymous):

If this is the graph of f(x)=a^(x+h) +k, then...

OpenStudy (anonymous):

OpenStudy (solomonzelman):

you want the shifts?

OpenStudy (anonymous):

OpenStudy (anonymous):

I got A, is that correct?

OpenStudy (solomonzelman):

yes

OpenStudy (solomonzelman):

you shifted it 4 units down, (k is -4 in this case) and there are no domain restrictions.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

which of the following could be an example of a function with a domain (-infinity,+infinity) and range (-infinity,2)

OpenStudy (anonymous):

OpenStudy (solomonzelman):

you can reflect the function over the x-axis, this will reverse the domain being not "till positive infinity" but to "from negative infinity" and make the shift the function with k=-2.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

I think is C?

OpenStudy (solomonzelman):

No, and reason is, because x =0, you get 1 in your range, and you need it to go only till -2.

OpenStudy (mertsj):

By showing that the f(x) of both equations = x

OpenStudy (anonymous):

so it's B

OpenStudy (anonymous):

is that correct?

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