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22 votes
Sketch the graph of f(x)=((x^(3)-1)/(x^(2)-1))​

User Kristian Damian
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1 Answer

19 votes
19 votes

It's easier to sketch if you simplify
f(x). Factorize the numerator and denominator - simple to do with a difference of cubes or squares.


(x^3 - 1)/(x^2 - 1) = ((x - 1)(x^2 + x + 1))/((x - 1) (x + 1))

If
x\\eq1, we can cancel the factors of
x-1. Note that
f(1) itself is undefined. For all intents and purposes, aside from the singularity at
x=1, the graph of
f(x) will look exactly like the graph of


(x^2 + x + 1)/(x + 1)

Now, rewrite this as


(x(x + 1) + 1)/(x + 1)

Then when
x\\eq-1 (note that
f(-1) is also undefined), we can cancel
x+1 to reduce this to


x + \frac1{x+1}

On its own, the graph of
x is a line through the origin. When
x is a large number
\frac1{x+1} is small. But as
x gets closer to -1, the rational term blows up. Effectively, this means the graph of
f(x) looks like
\frac1{x+1} around
x=-1, and far enough away it looks like
x.

See the attached plot for a sketch of these details.

Sketch the graph of f(x)=((x^(3)-1)/(x^(2)-1))​-example-1
User Bjoernsen
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3.5k points