Difference between function and equation
What is the precise difference between function and equation ? In which case will it be wrong if used( common mistakes )? Also will the Venn diagram overlap if I were to draw one ? Any help and discussions will be appreciated .
$\endgroup$ 14 Answers
$\begingroup$A function is a transformation or mapping of one thing into another thing. It might be written as a rule (e.g. "Take the input and square it"), as a formula ("e.g. $f(x) = x^2$ or $x \mapsto x^2$), as a set of ordered pairs (e.g. $\left\{(1, 1), (2, 4), (3, 9), \ldots\right\}$, or any other way of showing how the output relates to the input. The function doesn't have to use numbers, either - a function could take two words and return their letters interlaced (so f(cat, dog) = cdaotg) or it could tell you what day of the week a given date falls on, or the post code/zip code of a given geographical location.
[In very formal terms, a function is a set of input-output pairs that follows a few particular rules.]
An equation is a declaration that two things are equal to each other. For example, $2^2 = 4$ is an equation stating that the square of 2 is 4. An equation may include variables of unknown value, and it may be true for all, some or none of the possible values of those variables. For example, $x^2 = 4$ is an equation that is true when $x = \pm 2$, and false for other values of $x$, while $x^2 = -4$ is an equation that is false for all real values of $x$.
What may be confusing you is that we often use equations to declare a relationship between two variables, often in the form of a function or formula. For example, $y = x^2$ is an equation stating that the value of $y$ is determined by the value of $x$ via the function $x^2$.
$\endgroup$ 6 $\begingroup$I think we also tend to muddy the semantic waters when we insist on referring to $f(x) = x^2$ (for instance) as a function. It's not: It's an equation. The function in this case is given by the expression $x^2$, so in that way we can say that expressions are functions. In this example, $f$ is the name of the function, $x$ is the input of the function,and $x^2$ is the expression which is the output, i.e., the function $f(x)$ itself.
$\endgroup$ 3 $\begingroup$It might be useful to introduce the term formula at this point.
Functions have arguments, i.e., values to be input into a formula. Equations do not have arguments to be input into a formula.
$\endgroup$ $\begingroup$A function $f(x):D\to C$ must satisfy $\forall x\in C \ \text{where f is defined in this point $x$},\ \exists!\ f(x)\in D$; i.e. every point in the domain of $f$ for which $f$ is still defined may have only one image, which is a point on the line (a point in the codomain). Not to confuse with surjectivity. For example, $f:\mathbb{R}\to\mathbb{R}$ with $f(x)=\sin(x)$ is non-surjective for there is no $x\in \mathbb{R}$ such that $f(x)=2$. But the $\sin(x)$ is a function because there's no $x$-value with a multiple $f(x)$-value.
An equation can be every equalty: a function is an equality, a differential equation is an equality.
E.g. $x=y^2$ is an equation, but not a function if we view it with x in the domain and y in the codomain. For instance, $x=1$ has $y=1$ and $y=-1$ as solution (point in domain with two different images). Hence, not a function in the $(x,y)$-plane.
More in general
"Zoraya ter Beek, age 29, just died by assisted suicide in the Netherlands. She was physically healthy, but psychologically depressed. It's an abomination that an entire society would actively facilitate, even encourage, someone ending their own life because they had no hope. Th…"