This section covers what graphs should be used for, despite being imprecise.
What is graphing used for?
Despite the fact that math is a language of precision, graphing has a rather useful (and important) role. In fact, it’s role is often overlooked due to the mechanical nature of how math is often taught and/or learned. Graphing is primarily useful for helping to build intuition about how two variables are relating together, as well as giving you global information about that relationship.
Most global information isn’t numeric and usually the notion of precision doesn’t apply. Nonetheless it is still quite useful. We give a few examples of global and nonprecise information that can be attained from graphs.
- Whether or not a relationship is continuous .
- Existence of information; such as whether or not a function has some maximal or minimal value.
- Approximate (but not precise) location/values for points of interest, such as the zeroes, maximum, or minimum values.
- The steepness or trending nature of a graph.
It is worth noting that often approximation is all that is needed. Having exact precision isn’t always (and in fact often isn’t) necessary. Nonetheless you should know what level of precision you do (or don’t) have when you are giving an answer, and this can be very difficult with a graph.
The mechanics of graphing
Graphing will be covered in greater detail on a per-function-type basis (in the ‘exploration topics’ to follow), however we will cover the basics of graphing each function type in the parent function section first. In an effort to be more familiar for you (and since we aren’t going to be modeling a specific situation here) we will often use the typical and variables as the independent and dependent variables respectively.