It's not multi-valued in the case of absolute values.Well, you can do that if you want, it is equivalent in this particular case. But in general we try and avoiding "overlapping" cases, since unless we're careful it can break the well-definedness of the function, in particular, it could lead to a map being multi-valued.
For example:
Now what is f(0)?
because it is just conventionYou got that straight from cambridge lol.
But how come -x is not x<= 0? Thats my actual question.
Well, it isn't really negative either... if you know what I mean.What? |0| = 0 which isn't positive.
is wrong.Well the definition of an absolute value is such that it is always positive.
That's how I was taught it.I do know what you mean, but
is wrong.
Well 0 isn't a positive number, I don't know what else to tell you. You can say the absolute value function is "non-negative" though.That's how I was taught it.
That identity you gave only works for real numbers. In general:Wasn't absolute value something like
|x| = sqrt(x²)
Or something about scalar quantity like in complex numbers, modulus
Wasn't absolute value something like
|x| = sqrt(x²)
Or something about scalar quantity like in complex numbers, modulus