Discussion about Math for DS 1 - week1 - AQ 1.9 - question 5 - option 1
Let x ∈ R. Which of the following functions is(are) injective?
f(x)=√10−x
Hello, Anand:
I reflected on this a little more.
I think the interpretation of this statement in the question is crucial: "Let x ∈ R"
Does this mean x's domain is in R? Or, x's domain is all of R?
That will determine how we approach this.
If the domain all of R is considered, then the function is still likely injective, but with a broader co-domain of C.
We are then, however, not talking about real-valued functions anymore.
However, I think this particular mathematics course intends for us to restrict ourselves to real-valued functions, where the range and co-domain are in R.
In that case, I think Manmay will be correct. In his reasoning, just because x belongs to R doesn't mean the domain has to be all of R, if we're restricting ourselves to real-valued functions. (This could be a point of discussion/clarification for the IIT team.)
The domain can probably end up being a subset of R, i.e. the interval (-infinity, 10]. The question's assumption still stands true that x
∈
R. In which case, the co-domain is also R.
In the interval
(-infinity, 10] as domain—for which x ∈ R still holds true—the expression is 1) a function and 2) real-valued (co-domain being R) and 3) injective (unique outputs).
This is probably (?) what the IIT team intended for us to reason, rather than get into unique complex roots when x > 10.
Also: as to your latest question: looking for injectivity in a relation makes no sense unless that relation is a function.
But, in this case, it is a function either way. Either in the restricted interval within R, or within all of R.
So the question of it being a non-function doesn't arise, I think.
What do you think?
Here's to our admit cards,