Could I please get some help with these two Multiple Choice please!
http://imgur.com/a/72K3s
(27) I don't know how to approach this :/
(28) I would like to know how to correctly approach this, I usually fluke tan graph questions 
Cheers
Edit: started writing this but paused for a bit so Zhen beat me to it

27.
so for any log, eg log
ab, b≠0, b must be positive aka b>0. This is because a (positive) number to a power can never equal zero or go negative, so what's inside the log therefore cannot be less than zero either. So we know (x-2)
2>0 and therefore x≠2 but can be anything else. So, maximal or implied domain is x belongs to R \{2}. And (x-2)
2 can be any number between 0 and infinity not inclusive (can't be zero) so the log range is R (you can see this using a standard log graph). So answer is B
Also, 2logx is different to logx
2 only because you can take the negative values of x when it's squared as it'll end up as a positive number (squaring things can be annoying in maths)
28.
Not sure if you were taught this (don't think you have to know this, just a bit of additional info), but if you line a ruler up to the right side of a unit circle, the value of the tan of an angle is just the the ruler measurement where the line extends out to the ruler. That's always how I remembered it (image attached). So tan(0)=0. From this you can also tell that the period of tan x is π without having to memorise it, just imagine the angles changing (worked for me and just a little trivia - you don't need to know this but it may help)
From the graph you're given you know that the period is π/2, half of what a regular tan graph would be so you know as period = π/n for tan, n=2. First thing you do is dilate it accordingly, to tan(2x). You also know it's translated π/4 (or negative π/4 or 3π/4 etc, you can just read off the graph for various possible translations) because you know tan(0)=0 and the x intercept/s have moved along by π/4. So, you replace x with (x-π/4), which makes the equation tan(2(x-π/4)), C