Thanks for letting me know. The question is from chapter 7 in the Cambridge methods textbook.
It asks me to find the range of the function by graphing it.
Even if I graph it using CAS, I'm unsure of finding the horizontal asymptote, and from that, finding the range.
The answer is (1, infinite)
Please help 
We can treat e^(2/sqrt(x)) as the composite function f(g(x)), where f(x)=e^x and g(x)=2/sqrt(x)
The domain of g(x) is (0,infinity) because sqrt(x) is the denominator (meaning it can't be negative or 0). Hence, the range of the graph is also (0, infinity), because sqrt(x) is always positive, implying that 2/sqrt(x) is also always positive.
The range of g(x) inputted into f(x) gives us the range of f(g(x)) (because its a composite function and effectively all it means is that instead of inputting x into the function f, you are inputting g(x)).
Thus, to find the range of f(g(x)) we sketch f(x) for x e (0,infinity), which gives us (1, infinity).
Hope that makes sense!