on how to draw it, it depends on what domain you decide on, because you have to be either left of the vertex or right otherwise you fail the horizontal line test. the intersections though all functions and their inverses intersect on y=x, but since only half the parabola is chosen only 1 intersection will be shared between your chosen inverse f(x) and the normal f(x)not sure how to draw it here and the answer is aView attachment 33844
HI, WHAT WOULD THAT LOOK LIKE??on how to draw it, it depends on what domain you decide on, because you have to be either left of the vertex or right otherwise you fail the horizontal line test. the intersections though all functions and their inverses intersect on y=x, but since only half the parabola is chosen only 1 intersection will be shared between your chosen inverse f(x) and the normal f(x)
You gotta restrict the domain because what you've drawn is a relation. Restrict f(x) to monotonic increasing/decreasing and that will give you your inverse function.HI, WHAT WOULD THAT LOOK LIKE??
oops sorry caps on, but would my blue line be the inverse
Yeah seems legit
personally for parabolas, I find the vertex, restrict domain to either what they want or my choice (generally to the right of the parabola), then find the restricted range for the parabola given my restricted domain. Flip the domain and range so that they are for the inverse now and then solve for inverse function and plot 3-5 points to understand the general idea then sketch.awesome thx guys!! does anyone have tips on drawing inverse functions tho bc i do be flipping my paper in all degrees to sketch