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Perplex
  • Dashboard
Topics
Exponents & LogarithmsRounding & ErrorSequences & SeriesFinancial MathematicsMatricesComplex Numbers
Cartesian plane & linesFunction TheoryModellingTransformations & asymptotes
2D & 3D GeometryVoronoi DiagramsTrig equations & identitiesVectorsGraph Theory
ProbabilityDescriptive StatisticsBivariate StatisticsDistributions & Random VariablesInference & Hypotheses
DifferentiationIntegrationDifferential Equations
Paper 3
Plus
Calculator Skills
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Perplex

Function Theory (Lesson 5/5)

Inverse Functions

1 / 18

Discussion

If ​f−1, the inverse of ​f, is the function that "undoes" ​f​ and it is given that ​f(a)=b, find ​f−1(b).

Solution:

The inverse function undoes whatever ​f​ does: if ​y=f(x), then ​f−1(y)=x. Substituting ​a​ and ​b​ for ​x​ and ​y​ yields: if ​b=f(a), then ​​​f−1(b)=a.


Since we are given that ​f(a)=b, we must have

​
f−1(b)=a.
​
1 free

Function Theory (Lesson 5/5)

Inverse Functions

1 / 18

Discussion

If ​f−1, the inverse of ​f, is the function that "undoes" ​f​ and it is given that ​f(a)=b, find ​f−1(b).

Solution:

The inverse function undoes whatever ​f​ does: if ​y=f(x), then ​f−1(y)=x. Substituting ​a​ and ​b​ for ​x​ and ​y​ yields: if ​b=f(a), then ​​​f−1(b)=a.


Since we are given that ​f(a)=b, we must have

​
f−1(b)=a.
​
1 free