The domain of a function is the complete set of all possible input values \(x\) that allow the function \(f(x)\) to be defined. For rational functions specifically, the domain is affected by the denominator. The function is not defined where the denominator is zero.
To find the domain of \(f(x)=\frac{x+4}{x^2-6x+5}\), follow these steps:
- Solve \(x^2-6x+5=0\) to find the values of \(x\) that make the denominator zero.
- The solutions \(x = 1\) and \(x = 5\) are excluded from the domain.
This means the domain of \(f(x)\) is all real numbers except \(x = 1\) and \(x = 5\). Thus, the function is continuous everywhere else: \((\text{-}\infty, 1) \cup (1, 5) \cup (5, \infty)\).
Identifying the domain is crucial because it tells us where the function can operate without running into undefined points.