One-one function
A function is called one-one function if it never adopts the same value twice. This means, one-one functions return a unique range for each element of their domain.
Other names given to the one-one function are one to one, or injective function.
One-one functions are a set of functions which denote the relation between sets, elements or identities. The other two sets are surjective functions and bijective functions.
Definition
The function
Geometric proof
A function is one-one if and only if no horizontal line intersects its graph more than once.
In the graph below, the function is intersected once by the horizontal line. Therefore the function is geometrically proven to be one-one.
In the graph below, the function is intersected twice by the horizontal line. Therefore the function is geometrically proven no to be one-one.
Properties
- The domain of f equals the range of f-1.
- f-1(f(x))=x for every x in the domain of f and f
- The graph of a function and the graph of its inverse are symmetric with respect to the line y=x.
- If f and g are both one-one, then f°g follows injectivity.
- If g°f is one-one, then function f is one-one, but function g may not be.
- A one-one function is either strictly decreasing or strictly increasing.
- A function that is not a one-one is considered as many-to-one.
- Parabolic functions are not one-one functions.
Examples
Examples of one-one functions include:
- Identity function: f(x) is always injective.