Injective function
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"One-to-one" redirects here. For other uses, see One-to-one (disambiguation).
"Injective" redirects here. For injective modules, see Injective module.
Another injective function (this one is a bijection)
A non-injective function (this one happens to be a surjection)
In mathematics, an injective function is a function which associates distinct arguments with distinct values. More precisely, a function f is said to be injective if it maps distinct x in the domain to distinct y in the codomain, such that f(x) = y. Put another way, f is injective if f(a) = f(b) implies a = b (or a ≠ b implies f(a) ≠ f(b)), for any a, b in the domain. An injective function is called an injection, and is also said to be an information-preserving or one-to-one function (the latter is not to be confused with one-to-one correspondence, i.e. a bijective function). A function f that is not injective is sometimes called many-to-one. (However, this terminology is also sometimes used to mean "single-valued", i.e. each argument is mapped to at most one value.)
Examples and counter-examples
is injective (but not surjective as no value maps to a negative number).
is injective.
is not injective, since, for example, g(0) = g(1). More generally, when X and Y are both the real line R, then an injective function f : R → R is one whose graph is never intersected by any horizontal line more than once. Injections can be undoneFunctions with left inverses (often called sections) are always injections. That is to say, for f : X → Y, if there exists a function g : Y → X such that, for every Failed to parse (Missing texvc executable; please see math/README to configure.): x \in X
(f can be undone by g) then f is injective. Conversely, every injection with non-empty domain has a left inverse. Note that g may not be a complete inverse of f because the composition in the other order, f o g, may not be the identity on Y. In other words, a function that can be undone or "reversed", such as f, is not necessarily invertible (bijective). Injections are "reversible" but not always invertible. Although it is impossible to reverse a non-injective (and therefore information-losing) function, you can at least obtain a "quasi-inverse" of it, that is a multiple-valued function. Injections may be made invertibleIn fact, to turn an injective function f : X → Y into a bijective (hence invertible) function, it suffices to replace its codomain Y by its actual range J = f(X). That is, let g : X → J such that g(x) = f(x) for all x in X; then g is bijective. Indeed, f can be factored as inclJ,Yog, where inclJ,Yis the inclusion function from J into Y. Other properties
Image:Injective composition2.svg
The composition of two injective functions is injective.
See alsoLook up injective in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
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