AHL 2.7: COMPOSITE & INVERSE FUNCTIONS
| Concept | Key Idea | Core Skill |
|---|---|---|
| Composite Functions | Apply one function inside another | Correct order + domain checks |
| Inverse Functions | Undo a function’s action | Algebraic rearrangement + restriction |
📌 Composite Functions in Context
- Notation: (f ∘ g)(x) = f(g(x))
- Meaning: Always apply g first, then apply f to the result.
- Order matters: f ∘ g ≠ g ∘ f in general → composition is not commutative.
- Domain rule: x must be valid for g, and g(x) must lie inside the domain of f.
- Conceptually: Composite functions model multi-stage processes.
Composite_Function_Box.PNG
🔢 GDC & Technology Integration
- Use your GDC to compute compositions directly by defining f(x) and g(x), then evaluating f(g(x)).
- When finding inverses, use the GDC to verify correctness by checking that (f ∘ f⁻¹)(x) = x numerically.
- For quadratic inverses with restrictions, graph both f and f⁻¹ to visually confirm mirror symmetry across y = x.
- Always record the algebraic working — calculator output alone is not awarded full method marks.
Worked Example:
Let f(x) = 2x + 1 and g(x) = x² − 3.
- (f ∘ g)(x) = f(g(x)) = f(x² − 3) = 2(x² − 3) + 1 = 2x² − 6 + 1 = 2x² − 5
- (g ∘ f)(x) = g(2x + 1) = (2x + 1)² − 3 = 4x² + 4x − 2
This confirms that changing order changes the function entirely.
🌍 Real-World Connection
Composite functions appear in pricing chains (cost → tax → discount),
unit conversion pipelines, and physics (displacement → velocity → acceleration).
Each stage depends strictly on the previous output.
📌 Inverse Functions & Domain Restriction
- Definition: f⁻¹ reverses the operation of f.
- Identity Property: (f ∘ f⁻¹)(x) = x and (f⁻¹ ∘ f)(x) = x.
- One-to-one requirement: Only functions that pass the horizontal line test can have an inverse.
- If not one-to-one: We apply domain restriction.
📝 Paper Strategy
- Always write compositions in the correct inside → outside order: f(g(x)), never f(x)g(x).
- When finding inverses, you must explicitly show the swap of x and y before solving.
- If the function is not one-to-one, you must state the domain restriction clearly or you lose accuracy marks.
- Final answers must be labelled properly as f⁻¹(x), not just “y = …”.
IB Example:
f(x) = (x − 3)² − 2
- This parabola fails the horizontal line test.
- We restrict the domain to either x ≥ 3 or x ≤ 3.
- Only after restriction does an inverse exist.
📌 Finding an Inverse Function (Algebraic Method)
- 1. Replace f(x) with y
- 2. Swap x and y
- 3. Solve for y
- 4. Replace y with f⁻¹(x)
Worked Example:
f(x) = 3x − 4
- y = 3x − 4
- x = 3y − 4
- x + 4 = 3y
- y = (x + 4)/3
∴ f⁻¹(x) = (x + 4)/3
📌 Composition with Inverses
If f and f⁻¹ are truly inverses:
- (f ∘ f⁻¹)(x) = x → cancels completely
- (f⁻¹ ∘ f)(x) = x → also cancels completely
If composition does not simplify to x, the inverse is incorrect.
📝 Paper Strategy
- Always state the restricted domain with your inverse.
- Verify inverses using (f ∘ f⁻¹)(x).
- Never assume composition order can be swapped.
- Method marks come from clean algebra — not calculator output.