How do you find domain and range of inverse functions #f(x) = 1/(x-2)#?

2 Answers
Jul 27, 2015

Most important limitation is that the denominator may not be #0#

Explanation:

So the domain is limited by #x!=2#

As #x->2# the fraction gets larger and larger, whether you go to #2# from above or below. In "the language":

#lim_(x->2^-) f(x)=-oo# and #lim_(x->2^+) f(x)=+oo#

If #x# gets larger the fraction will become smaller, but never quite reaching #0#, so the range is #f(x)!=0# or:

#lim_(x->-oo) f(x)=0# and #lim_(x->+oo) f(x)=0#
graph{1/(x-2 [-10, 10, -5, 5]}

#x=2andf(x)=0# are called asymptotes .

Jul 27, 2015

The domain of an inverse function is the range of the function and vice versa.

Explanation:

For #f(x) = 1/(x-2)#, the domain of #f# is all reals except #2#, so the range of #f^-1# is all reals except #2#.

The range of #f# is all reals except #0#, so the domain of #f^-1# is all reals except #0#.

Notice that is we solve #y = 1/(x-2)# for #x#, we get:

#y(x-2)=1#

#xy-2y=1#

#xy=2y+1#

#x = (2y+1)/y#

We can see from this that for the original function, #f#, we can get every number for #y# except #0#.
That is the range of #f# and the domain of #f^-1#