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Encyclopedia :
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INV :
Inverse function |
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Inverse functionIn mathematics, an inverse function is in simple terms a function which "does the reverse" of a given function. More formally, if f is a function with domain X, then f -1 is its inverse function if and only if for every we have:
Simplifying rule Generally, if f(x) is any function, and g is its inverse, then g(f(x)) = x and f(g(x)) = x. In other words, an inverse function undoes what the original function does. In the above example, we can prove f -1 is the inverse by substituting (x - 2) / 3 into f, so Indeed, an alternative definition of an inverse function g of f is to require that g o f resp. f o g be the identity function on the domain resp. codomain of f. ExistenceFor a function f to have a valid inverse, it must be a bijection, that is: If f is a real-valued function, then for f to have a valid inverse, it must pass the horizontal line test, that is a horizontal line placed on the graph of f must pass through f exactly once for all real k. It is possible to work around this condition, by redefining f's codomain to be precisely its range, and by admitting a multi-valued function as an inverse. If one represents the function f graphically in an x-y coordinate system, then the graph of f -1 is the reflection of the graph of f across the line y = x. Algebraically, one computes the inverse function of f by solving the equation The symbol f -1 is also used for the (set valued) function associating to an element or a subset of the codomain, the inverse image of this subset (or element, seen as a singleton). See also
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