Respuesta :
Step-by-step explanation:
Remember that any function pairs each x value with exactly one y value. No x can have more than one y corresponding to it.
Example: when you take the points on the function y = sin x and reverse their coordinates (switch the x's and y's), you get the blue squiggly line (see graph) that goes up and down the y-axis. For instance, a point on the graph of y = sin x is (pi/2, 1) and this becomes the point (1, pi/2) on the blue wave.
The blue wave is not a function! It fails the Vertical Line Test miserably. Each x corresponds to an infinite number of y's.
Going back to y = sin x, you restrict its domain (all real numbers) to a set of numbers that will prevent the inverse from "doubling back" on itself--each x will correspond to only one y.
There are standard ways of doing this for each trigonometric function. For the sine function, you restrict its domain to the interval [-pi/2, pi/2}. When the coordinates of the restricted graph are switched, you get the red graph, which is a function, the inverse sine function.
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