Composite Functions
Composite Functions
f g
x f (x) gf (x)
e.g. 1 3 6
2 6 12
3 11 22
DOMAIN of gf (x) * RANGE of f (x) and to continue, these
(which is equal to must lie within the DOMAIN of g (x) RANGE of gf (x)
the domain of f (x))
gf (x)
The new composite function of gf will take us straight from x to gf (x). Here is the simplified
function:
Function f acts first.
gf (x) = g [ x² + 2 ]
= 2 [ x² + 2 ]
= 2 x² + 4 Then function g acts,
doubling the previous
expression.
g f
x g (x) fg (x)
1 2 6
2 4 18
3 6 38
fg (x) = f [ 2x ]
= [ 2x ]² + 2
= 4 x² + 2
fg (x) means that g acts first, then f. gf (x) means that f acts first, then g.
* The composite function will ONLY exist if the range of the first function lies within the domain of
the second function.
Example 1
Find:
a) fg (x) = f [ x² + 5 ]
= 2 [ x² + 5 ] + 3
= 2 x² + 10 + 3
= 2 x² + 13
b) gf (x) = g [ 2x + 3 ]
= [ 2x + 3 ]² + 5
= 4 x² + 12x + 9 + 5
= 4 x² + 12x + 14
fg (p) = 45 felly 2 p² + 13 = 45
2 p² = 32
p² = 16
p =
p =
Example 2
The domain of the second function g (x) is and 0.7358 does not lie within this range, so
we cannot continue. This is why gf (-1) does not exist.
b) fg (x) = f [3 1n x] g acts first
= 2e[3 1n x]
The Logarithm Rule
= 2e1n x³
a 1n x = 1n xa
= 2 x³ so...3 1n x = 1n x3
The DOMAIN of fg (x) is the domain of the function which acts first, namely g (x), therefore the
domain is .
To find the RANGE of fg (x) I will sketch a graph of the composite function 2x3. As you can see, it is
a cubic function:
1 x
DOMAIN
RANGE
As the gradient of the function is positive, this means that it is an increasing function and the lowest
value of f (x) will therefore be f (1)....because 1 is the lowest value of the domain.
f (1) = 2 (1) – k
= 2–k ...and then the values of f (x) will increase.
RANGE
ANSWER: To form gf, the range of the function acting first (f (x)) must lie within the domain of
the second function g (x), which is . Therefore
BUT in part b) of the question, note that the highest possible value of k is 2 therefore k = 1.