Non Linear Functions Pattern - Evaluation of Functions

Digital SAT® Math — Non Linear Functions

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Evaluating Nonlinear Functions

 

This pattern gives you a function definition — polynomial, exponential, radical, or rational — and asks you to compute a specific output. Plug in the given input, follow order of operations, and simplify. These are straightforward computation problems, but careless arithmetic is the #1 source of errors.

 

Worked Examples

 

Example 1. $h(t) = t^2 - 10$. What is $h(9)$?

A) $8$
B) $71$
C) $91$
D) $-1$

$h(9) = 9^2 - 10 = 81 - 10 = 71$
Gotcha: Option A computes $9 \times 2 - 10 = 8$ (multiplies instead of squaring). Option C forgets to subtract: $9^2 = 81$, but then adds $10$. Squaring means multiplying the number by itself, not by the exponent.
The answer is B.

 

Example 2. $g(x) = 2x^3$. What is $g(5)$?

A) $30$
B) $125$
C) $1000$
D) $250$

$g(5) = 2 \times 5^3 = 2 \times 125 = 250$
Gotcha: Option A computes $2 \times 5 \times 3 = 30$. Option B computes $5^3 = 125$ but forgets to multiply by $2$. Option C computes $2^3 \times 5^3 = 1000$ (cubes both the coefficient and the input). Exponents only apply to the base they're attached to.
The answer is D.

 

Example 3. $p(y) = \dfrac{100}{y - 5}$. What is $p(25)$?

A) $-1$
B) $4$
C) $20$
D) $5$

$p(25) = \dfrac{100}{25 - 5} = \dfrac{100}{20} = 5$
Gotcha: Option C divides $100$ by $5$ instead of by $25 - 5 = 20$. Always compute the denominator first, then divide. Option B divides $25$ by something instead of $100$.
The answer is D.

 

Example 4. $k(n) = 3 + 2^n$. What is $k(4)$?

A) $19$
B) $11$
C) $16$
D) $625$

$k(4) = 3 + 2^4 = 3 + 16 = 19$
Gotcha: Option B computes $3 + 2 \times 4 = 11$ (treats the exponent as multiplication). Option C gives $2^4 = 16$ but forgets to add $3$. Option D computes $(3 + 2)^4 = 625$ (adds before exponentiating — wrong order of operations).
The answer is A.

 

Example 5. $f(x) = \sqrt[3]{5x + 7}$. What is $f(4)$?

$f(4) = \sqrt[3]{5(4) + 7} = \sqrt[3]{27} = 3$
Evaluate inside the radical first: $5(4) + 7 = 27$. Then take the cube root: $\sqrt[3]{27} = 3$.

 

Example 6. A function is defined by $f(x) = -2(x - 3)^2 + 8$. What is $f(0)$?

$f(0) = -2(0 - 3)^2 + 8 = -2(9) + 8 = -18 + 8 = -10$
This gives the $y$-intercept. The $y$-intercept is always $f(0)$.

 

What to Do on Test Day

  • Order of operations matters. Exponents before multiplication. Parentheses first. $2 \times 5^3 = 2 \times 125 = 250$, not $10^3 = 1000$.
  • Squaring vs. multiplying by 2: $x^2$ means $x \times x$. It does not mean $2x$. This is the most common error on easy questions.
  • Evaluate the denominator first in rational functions. $\dfrac{100}{25-5} = \dfrac{100}{20}$, not $\dfrac{100}{5}$.
  • Negative inputs: $(-3)^2 = 9$ (positive), but $-3^2 = -9$ (negative). Parentheses matter.
  • $y$-intercept = $f(0)$. Plug in $x = 0$ to find the $y$-intercept. For polynomial $ax^2 + bx + c$, the $y$-intercept is just $c$.
  • Check your arithmetic. These problems are easy conceptually but punish careless mistakes. Double-check your computation before selecting an answer.

Learn the pattern. Then lock it in.

The SAT repeats question patterns. Miss them, and you lose points. Recognize them fast, and you gain points. JustLockedIn shows you which patterns are hurting your score and gives you focused practice to fix them.

Practice this pattern → 380 practice questions available