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College Algebra: Comprehensive Study Guide and Practice Questions

Study Guide - Smart Notes

Tailored notes based on your materials, expanded with key definitions, examples, and context.

Equations and Solutions

Solving Linear and Quadratic Equations

Equations are mathematical statements that assert the equality of two expressions. In College Algebra, solving equations is a fundamental skill, including linear, quadratic, and radical equations.

  • Linear Equations: An equation of the form ax + b = 0. The solution is .

  • Quadratic Equations: An equation of the form ax^2 + bx + c = 0. Solutions are found using the quadratic formula:

  • Radical Equations: Equations involving roots, such as or , often require squaring both sides to eliminate the radical.

Example: Solve and find the sum of the solutions.

  • Rewrite as

  • Apply the quadratic formula:

  • Sum of solutions for is

Functions and Their Properties

Function Notation and Evaluation

A function is a relation that assigns each input exactly one output. Function notation is written as , where is the input variable.

  • Evaluating Functions: Substitute the given value into the function.

  • Example: If , then .

Domain of a Function

The domain of a function is the set of all possible input values (typically ) for which the function is defined.

  • For rational functions , the domain excludes .

  • For square root functions , the domain is .

Odd and Even Functions

Odd functions satisfy for all in the domain. Even functions satisfy .

  • Example: is odd; is even.

Algebraic Manipulation

Simplifying Expressions

Simplifying algebraic expressions involves combining like terms, factoring, and rationalizing denominators.

  • Example: Simplify as .

Factoring

Factoring is expressing an expression as a product of its factors.

  • Example:

Systems of Equations

Solving Systems

A system of equations consists of two or more equations with the same variables. Solutions are values that satisfy all equations simultaneously.

  • Methods: Substitution, elimination, and graphical methods.

  • Example: Solve , , .

Graphing and Transformations

Graphing Linear Equations

The graph of a linear equation is a straight line with slope and y-intercept .

  • Finding the Equation of a Line: Use the point-slope form .

  • Parallel Lines: Have the same slope.

Transformations of Functions

Transformations include shifting, stretching, and compressing graphs.

  • Vertical Shifts: shifts up by units.

  • Horizontal Shifts: shifts right by units.

  • Stretch/Compression: stretches vertically by factor .

Inverse Functions

Finding the Inverse

The inverse function reverses the effect of . To find the inverse, solve for in terms of .

  • Example: For , set , solve for :

  • So,

Summary Table: Function Transformations

Transformation

Effect on Graph

Example

Vertical Shift

Up/down by units

Horizontal Shift

Right/left by units

Vertical Stretch/Compression

Stretched/compressed by factor

Reflection

Across x-axis or y-axis

or

Additional info:

  • Some questions involve finding the sum of solutions, which for quadratics is .

  • Questions on function composition: means substitute into .

  • Domain questions require identifying values that make denominators zero or radicands negative.

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