Relations and Functions: The Function Flipper
Explore the concept of inverse functions through interactive function machines. See how a function transforms inputs to outputs, and how its inverse reverses the process.
Help & Instructions
▼- Select a Function: Choose from predefined functions or create your own
- Input Values: Enter a value to see how the function transforms it
- Observe the Process: Watch how the function machine processes the input
- See the Inverse: Observe how the inverse function reverses the process
- Analyze Mappings: View visual representations of function mappings
- Understand the concept of a function and its inverse
- Learn how to find the inverse of a function
- Visualize function mappings and their reversals
- Recognize when a function has an inverse
Function and Inverse Machine
Select a function and input values to see how it works and how its inverse reverses the process:
Function Results
See how the function and its inverse transform values:
Function History
Recent function operations:
Function Mapping
Visual representation of function mappings:
A function f maps inputs from its domain to outputs in its range. The inverse function f⁻¹ reverses this process, mapping outputs back to their original inputs. For a function to have an inverse, it must be one-to-one (each input maps to a unique output).
The Mathematics of Functions and Inverses
A function is a relation between a set of inputs (domain) and a set of possible outputs (range) with the property that each input is related to exactly one output.
Example for f(x) = 2x + 3:
- Set y = 2x + 3
- Swap x and y: x = 2y + 3
- Solve for y: y = (x - 3)/2
- Thus, f⁻¹(x) = (x - 3)/2
- f(f⁻¹(x)) = x for all x in the domain of f⁻¹
- f⁻¹(f(x)) = x for all x in the domain of f
- The graph of f⁻¹ is the reflection of the graph of f across the line y = x
- Only one-to-one functions have inverses
Inverse functions are used in:
- Cryptography: Encryption and decryption processes
- Engineering: Converting between measurement systems
- Economics: Supply and demand curves
- Physics: Converting between different units or coordinate systems
- Computer Science: Hash functions and their inverses


