Heinsbergrelatz Posted July 29, 2011 Posted July 29, 2011 (edited) okay i have problem, and i want to know how to solve these kind of questions in general. i think i get it, but its alittle confusing. so the problem goes like this, say f(x)=-2x^2+10x-150, find the domain of f such that its inverse exists. I get the Domain of f(x)=R range f inverse, but maybe someone could clarify the situation here for me. Thank you Edited July 29, 2011 by Heinsbergrelatz
Fuzzwood Posted July 29, 2011 Posted July 29, 2011 Easy, what does the inverse of a function actually mean? And how does domain relate to range?
mathematic Posted July 29, 2011 Posted July 29, 2011 okay i have problem, and i want to know how to solve these kind of questions in general. i think i get it, but its alittle confusing. so the problem goes like this, say f(x)=-2x^2+10x-150, find the domain of f such that its inverse exists. I get the Domain of f(x)=R range f inverse, but maybe someone could clarify the situation here for me. Thank you The point of the question is that there is more than one x for each value of f(x) (with one exception). Therefore to define the inverse properly, you have to breakup the x domain into pieces, so that there is only one x for each value of f(x).
Heinsbergrelatz Posted July 31, 2011 Author Posted July 31, 2011 just to clarify for my example, is the domain [2.5.infinity] ??
mathematic Posted July 31, 2011 Posted July 31, 2011 (edited) just to clarify for my example, is the domain [2.5.infinity] ?? Yes. Also (-infinity,2.5), but not both at the same time. Edited July 31, 2011 by mathematic
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