Hi,
for some exam questions I have seen they might give an equation (say f(x)=e^x - 4) and ask why the x coordinate of any intersection points of f(x) and its inverse satisfy an equation (e^x - x - 4 = 0) which obviously requires you to equate f(x)=x.
But in the textbook I have seen a question y=-x^3 which intersects with its inverse on the line y=-x.
So is there a general rule or something I need to know? Or should I be actually equating the forward with the inverse all the time, or draw a graph to make sure?
for some exam questions I have seen they might give an equation (say f(x)=e^x - 4) and ask why the x coordinate of any intersection points of f(x) and its inverse satisfy an equation (e^x - x - 4 = 0) which obviously requires you to equate f(x)=x.
But in the textbook I have seen a question y=-x^3 which intersects with its inverse on the line y=-x.
So is there a general rule or something I need to know? Or should I be actually equating the forward with the inverse all the time, or draw a graph to make sure?