Respuesta :

Answer:

[tex]\mathbb{R}-\{0\}[/tex]

[tex](-\infty,0)\ U\ (0,+\infty)[/tex]

Step-by-step explanation:

The domain of a Function

Given a real function f(x), the domain of f is made of all the values x can take, such that f exists. The function given in the question is

[tex]\displaystyle f(x)=-\frac{1}{x^2}-4[/tex]

Finding the domain of a function is not possible by giving x every possible value and check if f exists in all of them. It's better to find the values where f does NOT exist and exclude those values from the real numbers.

Since f is a rational function, we know the denominator cannot be 0 because the division by 0 is not defined, so we use the denominator to find the values of x to exclude from the domain.

We set

[tex]x^2=0[/tex]

Or equivalently

x=0

The domain of f can be written as

[tex]\mathbb{R}-\{0\}[/tex]

Or also

[tex](-\infty,0)\ U\ (0,+\infty)[/tex]