Function (mathematics) Study Guide
Study Guide
📖 Core Concepts
Function: A rule assigning exactly one output \(y\) in the codomain \(Y\) to each input \(x\) in the domain \(X\); written \(f\colon X\to Y,\;f(x)=y\).
Domain / Codomain: Set of allowed inputs vs. set that contains all possible outputs.
Image (Range): Set of actual outputs \(\{f(x)\mid x\in X\}\).
Preimage: For \(y\in Y\), the set \(\{x\in X\mid f(x)=y\}\); for a subset \(B\subseteq Y\), \(\{x\in X\mid f(x)\in B\}\).
Partial vs. Total Function: Partial – each \(x\) relates to at most one \(y\); total – defined for every \(x\in X\).
Injective (One‑to‑One): Different inputs give different outputs; \(f(x1)=f(x2)\Rightarrow x1=x2\).
Surjective (Onto): Every \(y\in Y\) is hit by some \(x\in X\).
Bijective: Both injective and surjective; admits a two‑sided inverse \(f^{-1}\).
Composition: \((g\circ f)(x)=g(f(x))\); associative, identity function \(\operatorname{id}\) is neutral.
Restriction / Extension: \(f|S\) limits the domain to \(S\subseteq X\); extensions (e.g., analytic continuation) enlarge the domain while preserving structure.
Multivariate Function: Takes an ordered \(n\)-tuple \((x1,\dots,xn)\) as input: \(f\colon X1\times\cdots\times Xn\to Y\).
Notation: Arrow \(x\mapsto x+1\); index \(an\) for sequences; power‑series, recurrence, implicit definitions.
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📌 Must Remember
Definition (Set‑theoretic): \(f\subseteq X\times Y\) with \(\forall x\in X\,\exists!\,y\in Y\;(x,y)\in f\).
Injective ⇔ Left Inverse: \(\exists g\) s.t. \(g\circ f = \operatorname{id}X\).
Surjective ⇔ Right Inverse (requires Choice): \(\exists g\) s.t. \(f\circ g = \operatorname{id}Y\).
Bijective ⇔ Two‑Sided Inverse: \(f^{-1}\circ f = \operatorname{id}X\) and \(f\circ f^{-1} = \operatorname{id}Y\).
Canonical Factorization: Any \(f\) = injection \(\circ\) surjection: \(f = i\circ s\) where \(s\colon X\to f(X)\) is onto and \(i\colon f(X)\hookrightarrow Y\) is one‑to‑one.
Domain of a Formula: Remove points that make denominators zero or radicands negative.
Monotonic ⇒ Invertible (on the image).
Graph of \(f\): \(\{(x,f(x))\mid x\in X\}\).
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🔄 Key Processes
Checking Injectivity
Assume \(f(x1)=f(x2)\).
Manipulate algebraically to deduce \(x1=x2\).
Checking Surjectivity
Start with arbitrary \(y\in Y\).
Solve \(f(x)=y\) for \(x\); show a solution exists for every \(y\).
Finding the Inverse of a Bijective Function
Write the equation \(y = f(x)\).
Solve explicitly for \(x\) in terms of \(y\); rename the solution \(f^{-1}(y)\).
Restricting a Function
Choose subset \(S\subseteq X\).
Define \(f|S(x)=f(x)\) for \(x\in S\).
Composing Functions
Verify codomain of the first matches domain of the second.
Substitute: \((g\circ f)(x)=g(f(x))\).
Canonical Factorization
Compute image \(f(X)\).
Define surjection \(s\colon X\to f(X)\), \(s(x)=f(x)\).
Define injection \(i\colon f(X)\hookrightarrow Y\), \(i(y)=y\).
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🔍 Key Comparisons
Injective vs. Surjective
Injective: No two distinct inputs share an output.
Surjective: Every possible output is used at least once.
Partial vs. Total Function
Partial: May be undefined for some \(x\in X\).
Total: Defined for every \(x\in X\).
Restriction vs. Extension
Restriction: Shrinks the domain, keeps rule unchanged.
Extension: Enlarges the domain, often by a new rule that agrees on the overlap.
Arrow Notation vs. Index Notation
Arrow: Describes rule without naming the function (\(x\mapsto x+1\)).
Index: Treats function as a sequence (\(an\)).
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⚠️ Common Misunderstandings
“Every function has an inverse.” Only bijections have a two‑sided inverse; injective‑only functions have a left inverse on the image, not on the whole codomain.
Confusing image with codomain. The image may be a proper subset of the codomain; surjectivity means they coincide.
Assuming composition is commutative. In general \(g\circ f \neq f\circ g\).
Partial function = undefined everywhere else. It is still a relation; the domain of definition is just the set where a value exists.
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🧠 Mental Models / Intuition
Function as a “machine”: each input slides through a single‑exit pipe; think of the graph as the set of all (input,output) pins on a board.
Injective = “no collisions”: imagine parking cars in distinct spots; two cars never share the same spot.
Surjective = “full coverage”: every parking spot (output) has at least one car (input).
Bijective = “perfect one‑to‑one matching” – a perfect shuffle of two decks.
Restriction = “closing off doors”: you lock off parts of the domain; everything else works unchanged.
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🚩 Exceptions & Edge Cases
Empty Domain: The empty function \(f\colon\varnothing\to Y\) is vacuously injective and surjective onto the empty image, but not onto a non‑empty codomain.
Multi‑valued “functions”: E.g., complex square root; require branch cuts to become true (single‑valued) functions.
Axiom of Choice: Right‑inverse characterization of surjectivity relies on it; without Choice, a surjection may lack a global right inverse.
Implicit Definitions: May define a function locally but not globally (e.g., \(x^2+y^2=1\) defines \(y=\pm\sqrt{1-x^2}\)).
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📍 When to Use Which
Prove bijectivity → Show both injective and surjective (or construct explicit inverse).
Find inverse → Use algebraic solving when the function is given by a formula; use monotonicity for real functions.
Determine domain of a formula → Look for division by zero, even roots of negative numbers, logarithms of non‑positive numbers.
Choose notation → Arrow notation for ad‑hoc rule definitions; index notation for sequences; power‑series when convergence properties matter.
Apply restriction → When you need a function only on a subset where a property (e.g., injectivity) holds, enabling a local inverse.
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👀 Patterns to Recognize
Linear‑fractional forms \(\frac{ax+b}{cx+d}\) often hint at a bijection on \(\mathbb{R}\setminus\{-d/c\}\).
Quadratic equations in the definition of a function usually signal two‑valued behavior → need to pick a branch for a true function.
Monotonicity + continuity on an interval ⇒ automatically surjective onto its image and invertible there.
Composition associativity appears in nested function problems; you can regroup without changing the result.
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🗂️ Exam Traps
“If a function is injective, it must be surjective.” Wrong unless the codomain equals the image.
Choosing the wrong branch of a multi‑valued function (e.g., picking \(-\sqrt{x}\) when the principal value is required).
Assuming a partial function is total when the domain isn’t explicitly stated; forget to exclude points like \(x=3\) in \(f(x)=\frac{x^2+1}{x-3}\).
Confusing preimage of an element with inverse function; the preimage may be a set, not a single value.
Treating restriction as a new function with a different rule; it inherits the same rule, only on a smaller domain.
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