do you mean y=sin(arcsinx)?And why are their domains different? Because I thought they were inverse functions and cancelled each other out to become the same function y=x. Can someone explain?
asinx is the same as sin^-1 xdo you mean y=sin(arcsinx)?
i think u mixed it up a bit
is what I think.
i remember the syntaxalso the asin(sin(x)) do not cancel completely to x the graph of asin(sin(x)) is given by
when u use latex do u memorise the syntax and type it in or just use the buttons?
lol i did mix it up..i think u mixed it up a bit
sin(asin(x)) will have a domain of -1-x-1 since the domain of asin(x) is -1-x-1.
and asin(sin(x)) has infinite domain because the sin of any value of x will lie between -1-x-1 so the asin of the number will always have a value
can u use greater than signs in this? it seems to cut off my text when i use it <>