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  1. Algebra Ii
  2. Comparing Functions Represented in Different Ways

ALGEBRA 2 • ANALYZE FUNCTIONS

Comparing Functions Represented in Different Ways

Learn to compare key properties of functions even when they are shown in completely different formats.

SECTION 1

Historical Context & Motivation

Mathematics didn't always have the variety of representations we use today. For centuries, mathematicians worked almost exclusively with verbal descriptions and geometric diagrams. The idea that a single relationship could be expressed as an equation, a table, a graph, and a sentence — and that all four could be compared on equal footing — is a surprisingly modern development. Understanding this history helps explain why comparing functions across representations is one of the most important skills in algebra.

1637
Descartes Links Algebra and Geometry
René Descartes published La Géométrie, introducing the coordinate plane. For the first time, algebraic equations could be visualized as curves, creating a bridge between two representations.
1748
Euler Formalizes the Function Concept
Leonhard Euler defined a function as any expression involving a variable, establishing the algebraic representation as a central tool in mathematics.
1800s
Tables Drive the Sciences
Scientists like Charles Babbage compiled massive numerical tables for navigation and astronomy. Comparing tabular data with known formulas became essential for verifying predictions.
2010
Common Core Codifies Multi-Representation Fluency
The Common Core State Standards (specifically F-IF.9) formally require students to compare properties of two functions when each is given in a different format — algebraic, graphical, tabular, or verbal.

Today, data appears in every format imaginable: a scientist might read a graph while a colleague hands over a formula, and a third team member presents raw numbers in a spreadsheet. The central question this lesson addresses is: How do you extract and compare key properties — like maximums, minimums, intercepts, and rates of change — when two functions are shown in completely different ways?

SECTION 2

Core Principles & Definitions

Before you can compare two functions given in different formats, you need a common language of function properties — measurable features that every function has, regardless of how it is presented. Think of these properties as a checklist you can fill in no matter whether you're looking at a graph, reading an equation, scanning a table, or interpreting a word problem.

1

Four Representations

A function can be expressed algebraically (an equation like f(x) = −2x² + 8), graphically (a plotted curve), numerically (an input-output table), or verbally (a sentence describing the relationship).
2

Key Comparable Properties

The properties you most often compare include: domain and range, intercepts, maximum and minimum values, end behavior, and rate of change (slope or average rate of change).
3

Translation Strategy

To compare, extract the same property from both functions. For an equation, you may need to complete the square or evaluate specific inputs. For a graph, you read coordinates directly. For a table, you look for patterns or extremes in the listed values.
4

Equal Validity

No representation is 'better' than another. Each has strengths: equations are precise, graphs reveal shape at a glance, tables give exact data points, and verbal descriptions provide real-world context.
✦ KEY TAKEAWAY
Imagine two friends each describe the same mountain hike, but one shows you a photo and the other reads you a trail report with elevation numbers. You can still figure out which hike reaches a higher peak — you just pull the elevation from each source. Comparing functions across representations works the same way: identify the property you need, extract it from whatever format you've been given, and then compare the values directly.
SECTION 3

Visual Explanation — Seeing the Same Property Across Formats

The diagram below shows two quadratic functions side by side. Function f is given as a graph (a downward-opening parabola), while Function g is given as an algebraic equation. Your task is to determine which function has the larger maximum value. Study the diagram and follow the annotations.

Comparing Two Quadratics: Graph vs. EquationFunction f — Graphxy0123436912Max = (2, 12)Function g — Equationg(x) = −3x² + 12x − 2Step 1: Find vertex x-coordinatex = −b / (2a) = −12 / (2·(−3)) = 2Step 2: Evaluate g(2)g(2) = −3(4) + 12(2) − 2 = 10Maximum of g = 10at vertex (2, 10)f has the larger maximum: 12 > 10
The left panel shows function f as a parabola with its vertex at (2, 12). The right panel shows how to algebraically find the vertex of g(x) = −3x² + 12x − 2, yielding a maximum of 10. Since 12 > 10, function f has the larger maximum.

Notice that both functions happen to share the same x-coordinate for their vertex, but their maximum y-values differ. From the graph of f, you can read the peak directly: the highest point on the curve is at y = 12. From the equation of g, you need to calculate the vertex using x = −b/(2a) and then substitute back in. Both paths lead to a single number you can compare.

SECTION 4

Mathematical Framework — Extracting Properties from Each Representation

The key to this standard is knowing which formulas or techniques let you extract a property from a given representation. Below are the most important tools for each property you are likely to compare.

Finding the Maximum or Minimum

VERTEX OF A QUADRATIC (ALGEBRAIC)
x = −b / (2a), then y = f(−b / (2a))
For f(x) = ax² + bx + c, the vertex is at x = −b/(2a). Substitute this x back into the equation to find the maximum (if a < 0) or minimum (if a > 0) value.

Finding Intercepts

Y-INTERCEPT (ALGEBRAIC)
y-intercept = f(0) = c (for standard form ax² + bx + c)
Set x = 0 and evaluate. In a table, find the row where x = 0. On a graph, find where the curve crosses the y-axis.
X-INTERCEPTS (ALGEBRAIC)
Set f(x) = 0 and solve: x = (−b ± √(b² − 4ac)) / (2a)
In a table, look for rows where the output is 0 or changes sign. On a graph, read where the curve crosses the x-axis.

Finding Rate of Change

AVERAGE RATE OF CHANGE
Average rate of change = (f(b) − f(a)) / (b − a)
This works for any representation. From a graph, pick two points and compute rise over run. From a table, choose two rows and calculate the ratio of the change in output to the change in input. From an equation, evaluate at two x-values.
📌 Quick Reference
For a linear function f(x) = mx + b, the rate of change is just the slope m, which is constant. For quadratics and other nonlinear functions, the average rate of change depends on the interval you choose.
SECTION 5

Detailed Breakdown — Reading Properties from Each Format

The table below is your go-to reference for extracting properties from each of the four representations. Whenever you face a comparison problem, first identify which property you need, then look up how to find it for the format you've been given.

Extraction methods by representation
PropertyAlgebraicGraphicalTableVerbal
Max / MinUse vertex formula x = −b/(2a); evaluate f at that xRead the highest or lowest point on the curveFind the largest or smallest y-value in the tableLook for phrases like "reaches a peak of" or "bottoms out at"
Y-interceptEvaluate f(0)Where the curve crosses the y-axisRow where x = 0"starts at" or "initial value" language
X-interceptsSolve f(x) = 0Where the curve crosses the x-axisRows where y = 0 or sign changes"reaches zero when" language
Rate of ChangeSlope m (linear) or Δy/Δx over an intervalSteepness / rise over run between two pointsCompute (y₂ − y₁)/(x₂ − x₁) from two rows"increases by ... per ..." phrasing
DomainLook for restrictions (square roots, denominators)Horizontal span of the curveRange of x-values listed (may be partial)"valid for" or context limits
Four Representations of the Same Functionf(x) = −x² + 4x + 5 shown four ways — same properties, different formatsALGEBRAICf(x) = −x² + 4x + 5a = −1, b = 4, c = 5Vertex: x = −4/(2·(−1)) = 2f(2) = −4 + 8 + 5 = 9Max = 9 at x = 2GRAPHICALxy(2, 9)y-int: 5NUMERICAL (TABLE) xf(x) −10 05 18 29 ←max 38 45 50VERBALA ball is thrown upward from aheight of 5 feet. It rises to apeak height of 9 feet after2 seconds, then falls backdown, hitting the ground at5 seconds.Max height = 9 ft at t = 2 s
All four panels describe the same function f(x) = −x² + 4x + 5. Notice that the maximum value of 9 is visible in every representation: it is the vertex in the equation, the highest point on the graph, the largest output in the table, and explicitly stated as the "peak height" in the verbal description.

This diagram illustrates a critical insight: no matter which representation you start from, you can always extract the same core properties. In a comparison problem, you will typically be given two different formats — for example, the graph of one function and the equation of another. Your job is to find the requested property in each and compare.

SECTION 6

Worked Example — Comparing a Table and an Equation

Suppose Function h is given in a table and Function k is given algebraically. Determine which function has a greater y-intercept and which has a greater maximum.

Function h — numerical table
xh(x)
−1−3
02
15
26
35
42

Function k is defined by k(x) = −2x² + 8x + 1.

Comparing y-intercepts and maximums

Step 1 — Find h's y-intercept from the table

The y-intercept is the output when x = 0. Look at the table: when x = 0, h(0) = 2.
y-intercept of h = 2

Step 2 — Find k's y-intercept from the equation

Substitute x = 0 into k(x) = −2(0)² + 8(0) + 1 = 1.
y-intercept of k = 1

Step 3 — Compare y-intercepts

Since 2 > 1, function h has the greater y-intercept.
h has the greater y-intercept

Step 4 — Find h's maximum from the table

Scan the h(x) column for the largest value. The outputs are −3, 2, 5, 6, 5, 2. The largest is 6, occurring at x = 2. Since the values rise to 6 and then fall, the maximum appears to be 6. (If the table covers the vertex region symmetrically, you can be confident this is the actual maximum.)
Maximum of h = 6

Step 5 — Find k's maximum from the equation

Because a = −2 < 0, the parabola opens downward, so the vertex is a maximum. Find the x-coordinate of the vertex: x = −b/(2a) = −8/(2 × (−2)) = −8/(−4) = 2. Then evaluate: k(2) = −2(4) + 8(2) + 1 = −8 + 16 + 1 = 9.
Maximum of k = 9

Step 6 — Compare maximums

Since 9 > 6, function k has the larger maximum.
k has the larger maximum (9 vs. 6)
⚠️ Watch Out for Tables
A table only shows selected x-values. If the vertex falls between listed x-values, the table might not show the true maximum. In such cases, use the symmetry of the data or fit a quadratic to the points to find the actual vertex. In this example, the symmetric pattern (5, 6, 5) centered at x = 2 confirms that 6 is the vertex value.
SECTION 7

Strengths & Limitations of Each Representation

Each representation excels at revealing certain properties and hides others. Understanding these trade-offs helps you choose the most efficient approach when comparing functions.

Strengths and limitations of the four function representations
RepresentationStrengthsLimitations
Algebraic (Equation)Exact values; works for any x; formulas for vertex, intercepts, and symmetry axis; can be manipulated (factored, completed the square)Hard to see overall shape at a glance; requires computation for every property; more abstract
GraphicalImmediate visual of shape, direction, intercepts, max/min; easy to compare two graphs side by side; shows end behaviorMay lack precision — reading coordinates requires estimation; hard to get exact values from a curve
Numerical (Table)Gives exact input-output pairs; easy to spot patterns; rate of change can be computed between any two listed rowsOnly shows selected points; vertex might fall between listed values; hard to see overall shape
Verbal DescriptionProvides real-world context; identifies meaning of max/min (e.g., 'peak height'); states domain/range in practical termsOften vague on exact values; may omit key details; harder to compute with
✦ KEY TAKEAWAY
Think of representations like different lenses on a camera. A wide-angle lens (graph) gives you the big picture but loses detail. A macro lens (equation) shows exact features but requires patience to interpret. A time-lapse (table) gives you snapshots, and a narration (verbal) tells the story. The best problem-solvers switch between lenses fluidly, extracting whatever property they need from whatever format they have.
SECTION 8

Connecting to Advanced Function Families

CCSS.F-IF.9 focuses on comparing any two functions across representations, not just quadratics. The same extraction-and-compare strategy applies to linear, exponential, absolute value, polynomial, and rational functions. As you advance through Algebra 2 and into Pre-Calculus, you will encounter increasingly varied pairings.

Multi-representation comparison extends across all function families
Comparison TypeWhat ChangesWhat Stays the Same
Two QuadraticsBoth have vertex, axis of symmetry, and at most 2 x-intercepts. Vertex formula applies to both.Extract max/min, intercepts, domain/range, then compare.
Linear vs. QuadraticLinear has constant rate of change; quadratic's rate of change varies. Linear has no max/min on all reals.Compare y-intercepts, compare values at specific inputs, compare average rates of change over an interval.
Exponential vs. LinearExponential grows (or decays) multiplicatively; linear grows additively. End behavior differs drastically.Compare y-intercepts, compare outputs at given x-values, compare average rates of change on the same interval.
Higher PolynomialsMay have multiple local maxima/minima; end behavior depends on degree and leading coefficient.Same strategy: identify the property, extract from each representation, compare numerically.

In Pre-Calculus and Calculus, you will learn to compare functions using derivatives and integrals, but the foundational skill is exactly what you are building now: translating between representations and identifying comparable properties. Mastering this now gives you a significant head start for more advanced coursework.

SECTION 9

Practice Problems

PROBLEM 1 — CONCEPTUAL
A student says, "You can't compare a function given as a graph with one given as an equation because they're in different formats." Explain why this statement is incorrect and describe the general strategy for making such a comparison.
PROBLEM 2 — BASIC CALCULATION
Function p is given by p(x) = −x² + 6x − 5. A table for Function q shows: x = 0, q = 1; x = 1, q = 4; x = 2, q = 5; x = 3, q = 4; x = 4, q = 1. Which function has the greater maximum value?
PROBLEM 3 — INTERMEDIATE
Function f is described verbally: "A rocket is launched from the ground and reaches a maximum height of 256 feet after 4 seconds." Function g is given by g(t) = −20t² + 160t. Compare the maximum heights and the times at which they occur.
PROBLEM 4 — APPLIED
A school is comparing two fundraiser plans. Plan A is modeled by the graph of a parabola that passes through (0, 0), has a vertex at (5, 500), and passes through (10, 0), where x is weeks and y is cumulative dollars raised. Plan B is described by B(x) = −15x² + 180x, where x is weeks and B(x) is cumulative dollars. Which plan raises more money at its peak, and which plan has a longer fundraising period (x-intercept to x-intercept)?
PROBLEM 5 — CRITICAL THINKING
Function m is given as a table: x = 0, m = 3; x = 2, m = 7; x = 4, m = 11; x = 6, m = 15. Function n is given by the verbal description: "n starts at 10 and increases at a constant rate, gaining 1.5 units for every 1 unit increase in x." Compare the y-intercepts, determine the type of each function, compare their average rates of change, and determine at what x-value the two functions have the same output.
SUMMARY

Lesson Summary

CCSS.F-IF.9 asks you to compare properties of two functions that are each represented in a different way — whether algebraically, graphically, numerically in a table, or through a verbal description. The core strategy is always the same: identify the property you need (such as maximum, minimum, y-intercept, x-intercepts, domain, range, or rate of change), extract that property from each function using the appropriate method for its format, and then compare the numerical values directly.

For algebraic representations, key tools include the vertex formula x = −b/(2a) for quadratics, evaluating f(0) for y-intercepts, and the quadratic formula for x-intercepts. For graphs, you read coordinates of key features directly. For tables, you scan for extremes and compute average rate of change as (y₂ − y₁)/(x₂ − x₁). For verbal descriptions, you translate contextual language — like "peak height" or "starts at" — into mathematical properties. This multi-representation fluency is foundational for all future work with functions in Pre-Calculus and beyond.

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