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Give an example of a function with a domain of (-infinity,0)

1 Answer

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You may consider a function with domain
(0,\infty) and switch
x\mapsto -x

For example, we know that


y=\log(x)

can only be evaluated for positive values of the argument. This means that


y=\log(-x)

can also be evaluated only for positive values of the argument, i.e.


-x>0 \iff x<0 \iff x \in (0,\infty)

To give another example, you may consider a function with domain
[0,\infty), consider its inverse to remove 0 from the domain, and finally switch again
x\mapsto -x:


√(x) \implies D = [0,\infty)\\(1)/(√(x)) \implies D = (0,\infty)\\ (1)/(√(-x)) \implies D = (-\infty,0)

User Duilio
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