Assessment |
Biopsychology |
Comparative |
Cognitive |
Developmental |
Language |
Individual differences |
Personality |
Philosophy |
Social |
Methods |
Statistics |
Clinical |
Educational |
Industrial |
Professional items |
World psychology |
Statistics: Scientific method · Research methods · Experimental design · Undergraduate statistics courses · Statistical tests · Game theory · Decision theory
A linear function can refer to two slightly different concepts. In geometry and elementary algebra a linear function is a first degree polynomial (generally a straight line) mathematical function of the form:
- f(x) = m x + b
where m and b are real constants and x is a real variable.
The problem with this geometric definition is that functions of the above form -despite their names- do not necessarily satisfy the conditions of a linear map. Therefore, some people refer to functions of the above form as affine functions. If and only if a function is of the above form with b equal to zero does the function satisfy the properties of a linear map, preserving scalar multiplication and vector addition for all points in its domain.
The constant m is often called the slope or gradient while b is the y-intercept, which gives the point of intersection between the graph of the function and the y-axis.
Examples:
- f(x)= 2x + 1
- f(x) = x
- f(x)= 9 x - 2
- f(x)= -3 x + 4
On a line graph, changing m makes the line steeper or shallower, and changing b moves the line up or down.
As mentioned, the line crosses the y-axis at the co-ordinate (0,b). If m≠0, it crosses the x-axis at (-b / m).
See also[]
External links[]
als:Lineare Funktion bg:Линейна функция de:Lineare Funktion es:Función lineal fr:Fonction linéaire he:פונקציה לינארית nl:Lineaire functie pt:Função linear pt:Função Polinomial#Função do Primeiro Grau ru:Линейная функция sl:Linearna funkcija sr:Линеарна функција fi:Lineaarinen funktio
This page uses Creative Commons Licensed content from Wikipedia (view authors). |