Math, asked by mithamilarasi, 10 months ago

difference between domain and preimage​

Answers

Answered by amoghsrivastava2may2
1

Answer:

In context|mathematics|lang=en terms the difference between domain and preimage is that domain is (mathematics) a of nonzero elements is zero while preimage is (mathematics) the set containing exactly every member of the domain of a function such that the member is mapped by the function onto an element of a given subset of the codomain of the function formally, of a subset b'' of the codomain ''y'' under a function ƒ, the subset of the domain ''x defined by.

As nouns the difference between domain and preimage is that domain is a geographic area owned or controlled by a single person or organization while preimage is (mathematics) the set containing exactly every member of the domain of a function such that the member is mapped by the function onto an element of a given subset of the codomain of the function formally, of a subset b'' of the codomain ''y'' under a function ƒ, the subset of the domain ''x defined by.

Step-by-step explanation:

Answered by harishkutty2007
1

Answer:

Step-by-step explanation:

Domain vs Preimage - What's the difference?

domain | preimage |

In context|mathematics|lang=en terms the difference between domain and preimage is that domain is (mathematics) a of nonzero elements is zero while preimage is (mathematics) the set containing exactly every member of the domain of a function such that the member is mapped by the function onto an element of a given subset of the codomain of the function formally, of a subset b'' of the codomain ''y'' under a function ƒ, the subset of the domain ''x defined by.

As nouns the difference between domain and preimage is that domain is a geographic area owned or controlled by a single person or organization while preimage is (mathematics) the set containing exactly every member of the domain of a function such that the member is mapped by the function onto an element of a given subset of the codomain of the function formally, of a subset b'' of the codomain ''y'' under a function ƒ, the subset of the domain ''x defined by.

 

Similar questions
Math, 1 year ago