Given f(x)=x2x+2 how do you find f(x2)?

1 Answer

Substitute x2 everywhere there is an x and you'll get to f(x2)=(x2)2x

Explanation:

When working function problems, it's all in the substitution!

We are starting with f(x)=x2x+2

So each time we're given an "x", we're going to square it, then divide itself (after we add 2 to it first). It's easier to see that if we said x=1 that we'd do the following:

f(1)=121+2=13

So - if we substitute a number into this function, we can come up with a single answer (substituting 1 generates an answer of 1/3).

What happens if we alter the rule? That is what your question is doing - instead of just dropping in any given number (i.e. "x"), we're instead going to subtract 2 from it first, then see what the answer is. What then is the general rule for substituting in x2?

Let's see - we substitute just like above:

f(x2)=(x2)2(x2)+2

See? Everywhere there was an x, there is now x-2. Let's simplify this expression:

f(x2)=(x2)2x

And I don't think we can do much more than that. If we expand out the numerator, there will be terms without an x, so there isn't a clean way to get the x out from the denominator without it being a mess - it'd look like x44x and that's just not simple at all!