Examples of Two One-One Functions Whose Sum is Not One-One

📺 Video Explanation

📝 Question

Give examples of two one-one functions:

\[ f_1,f_2:\mathbb{R}\to\mathbb{R} \]

such that:

\[ (f_1+f_2)(x)=f_1(x)+f_2(x) \]

is not one-one.


✅ Solution

Take:

\[ f_1(x)=x \]

and:

\[ f_2(x)=-x \]


🔹 Check \(f_1\)

Function:

\[ f_1(x)=x \]

is one-one because different inputs give different outputs.

✔ One-one.


🔹 Check \(f_2\)

Function:

\[ f_2(x)=-x \]

is also one-one.

✔ One-one.


🔹 Sum Function

Now:

\[ (f_1+f_2)(x)=x+(-x)=0 \]

So:

\[ (f_1+f_2)(x)=0 \quad \text{for all }x \]

This is a constant function.

Constant functions are not one-one.

❌ Not one-one.


🎯 Final Answer

Examples:

\[ \boxed{f_1(x)=x,\quad f_2(x)=-x} \]

Then:

\[ (f_1+f_2)(x)=0 \]

which is not one-one.


🚀 Exam Shortcut

  • Take opposite one-one functions
  • Their sum becomes constant
  • Constant functions are never injective
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