Graphing Rational Functions - StudyPulse
Boost Your VCE Scores Today with StudyPulse
8000+ Questions AI Tutor Help
Home Subjects Specialist Mathematics Graphs of rational functions

Graphing Rational Functions

Specialist Mathematics
StudyPulse

Graphing Rational Functions

Specialist Mathematics
01 May 2026

Graphing Rational and Quotient Functions

Systematic Approach

To sketch $f(x) = P(x)/Q(x)$, work through these steps in order:

  1. Simplify: Cancel common factors (note holes).
  2. Domain: Exclude zeros of $Q$.
  3. Intercepts: $y$-intercept at $f(0)$; $x$-intercepts where $P(x)=0$ (in domain).
  4. Vertical asymptotes: Zeros of $Q$ not cancelled.
  5. Horizontal/oblique asymptote: Compare degrees.
  6. Sign diagram: Determine where $f > 0$ and $f < 0$.
  7. Stationary points: $f’(x) = 0$ (for accurate sketching).
  8. Sketch: Use all gathered information.

Example 1: Simple Rational

Sketch $f(x) = \dfrac{2x}{x^2 - 4}$.

  • Factorise denominator: $(x-2)(x+2)$.
  • No common factors.
  • Domain: $\mathbb{R} \setminus {-2, 2}$.
  • $y$-intercept: $f(0) = 0$.
  • $x$-intercept: $x = 0$.
  • VAs: $x = 2$ and $x = -2$.
  • HA: $\deg P = 1 < \deg Q = 2$, so $y = 0$.
  • Sign: $f$ is odd ($f(-x) = -f(x)$), so symmetric about the origin.
  • Near $x=2^+$: $f \to +\infty$; near $x=2^-$: $f \to -\infty$.
  • Near $x=-2^+$: $f \to +\infty$; near $x=-2^-$: $f \to -\infty$.

Example 2: Oblique Asymptote

Sketch $f(x) = \dfrac{x^2 - 1}{x}$.

Divide: $f(x) = x - \dfrac{1}{x}$.
- Domain: $\mathbb{R} \setminus {0}$.
- VA: $x = 0$.
- Oblique asymptote: $y = x$.
- $x$-intercepts: $x^2 - 1 = 0 \Rightarrow x = \pm 1$.
- $f’(x) = 1 + x^{-2} > 0$ for all $x \neq 0$ (strictly increasing on each branch).

Example 3: Repeated Factor

Sketch $f(x) = \dfrac{x^2}{(x-1)^2}$.

  • Domain: $\mathbb{R} \setminus {1}$.
  • VA: $x = 1$.
  • HA: $y = 1$ (equal degrees, leading coefficients both 1).
  • $x$-intercept: $x = 0$.
  • $y$-intercept: $f(0) = 0$.
  • $f(x) \geq 0$ everywhere (numerator and denominator both squares).
  • Near $x=1$: $f \to +\infty$ from both sides (repeated factor means no sign change).

Regions of the Plane

A region defined by a rational inequality, e.g., $f(x) \geq k$, is found by:
1. Solving $f(x) - k = 0$ for boundary $x$-values.
2. Using a sign diagram for $f(x) - k$.
3. Combining with domain restrictions.

Example: Solve $\dfrac{2x}{x^2-4} \geq 0$.

From Example 1 sign analysis:
- $f > 0$ when $x \in (-2, 0) \cup (2, \infty)$.
- $f = 0$ when $x = 0$.
- Answer: $x \in (-2, 0] \cup (2, \infty)$.

KEY TAKEAWAY: A systematic step-by-step approach — simplify, domain, intercepts, asymptotes, sign, sketch — avoids errors and ensures all key features are captured.

EXAM TIP: On VCAA Paper 1, show the equations of all asymptotes and label coordinates of all intercepts. Marks are allocated for each piece of information.

COMMON MISTAKE: Forgetting that a horizontal asymptote can be crossed by the function graph (it only describes end behaviour). A function can equal its HA at some finite $x$ value.

Table of Contents