You can
put this solution on YOUR website!As to the domains, you need to know the domains of the originals to base them upon. You haven't supplied this info, so i assume both f(x) and g(x) have domains of "any real value".
f+g -->

f+g -->

and its domain is also "any real value of x" since we CAN put in any value we like and get a valid y-value out.
f-g -->

f-g -->

f-g -->

and its domain is also "any real value of x" since we CAN put in any value we like and get a valid y-value out.
fg -->

fg -->

fg -->

and its domain is also "any real value of x" since we CAN put in any value we like and get a valid y-value out.
By f/g, i assume you mean...
f/g -->

in which case the domain is again "any real value of x". If you have done Complex Numbers, there are 2 complex numbers that are NOT allowed, since we are trying to avoid the denominator being zero, because when that happens, the fraction zooms off to infinity, which is a bad thing mathematically.
jon.