How to Add, Subtract, Multiply and Divide Functions
Adding, subtracting, multiplying and dividing functions is about as simple as substituting in expressions and then just doing whichever operation it asks you to do. Check out this video lesson to see some examples of this and learn just how easy it is!
Cost, Revenue & Profit Functions
I'm a pretty big sports fan, but I've always been bummed out by how expensive it is to buy gear from my favorite teams. But when I recently moved to Minneapolis, I made some friends that have decided to do something about it! They just opened their own t-shirt company called Tinyapolis that sells t-shirts for the popular teams here in Minnesota.
But when you own your own business, you want to be sure that you're going to be able to make money. So before they took the plunge and bought all the supplies to begin making their shirts, they figured out what their revenue function, or r(x), would be. This is the function that would tell them how much money they would make from selling x t-shirts. But it's just as important to know what the cost function, or c(x), would be. This would tell them how much money they would have to spend in order to make x t-shirts.
After doing a little research, they came up with the revenue and cost functions seen here: r(x) = 20x and c(x) = x^2 - 1100x + 1200. But separate, these two functions don't tell the whole story. What is most important is, after it is all said and done and the t-shirts have been made and sold, did they make money or lose money?
That's where the profit function, or p(x), comes in. The profit function would tell my friends whether they would make more money from selling the shirts than it would cost them to make them. This means that the profit function is simply the revenue function minus the cost function. If it costs more to make x t-shirts than they make from selling them, they'll have negative profit. But if they make more from the sales than they spend producing the shirts, they'll be in good shape!
So what does this profit function actually look like? Well, all we really have to do is substitute in what we already know the revenue and cost functions are and then simplify. First we'll go ahead and distribute the negative sign to the x^2, the -1100x and the 1200. Then we combine like terms by grouping together the 20xand the 1100x, and we end up with our profit function as this: p(x) = -x^2 + 1120x - 1200. Whoa, if those numbers are correct, they're going to be rolling in it. I hope they spread the wealth!
Function Operations
This was an example of a function operation - specifically, subtraction. But we can do all the major operations on functions, such as addition, multiplication and division. All of these different operations simply require you to substitute in what you know the function is and go from there, which really isn't too bad, but there are a few reasons that these problems can get tricky.
First, just the function notation itself often confuses people into thinking it's more difficult than it actually is. Secondly, there is a good amount of prerequisite knowledge you need to know in order to fully solve function operation questions. This is because each operation will end up asking you to do something a little different. For example, when we subtracted functions just a few seconds ago, we were required to combine like terms. But when you multiply functions, you'll often have to remember how to multiply polynomials with FOIL or the area method. But that means as long as you're comfortable with function notation and have a solid algebra background, there isn't anything to it.