Compound Definitions

If g and h are previously defined functions (other than piecewise-defined functions), then the following equations are examples of legitimate definitions:

Once you have defined both g(x) and f (x) = 2g(x), then changing the definition of g(x) will redefine f (x).

Note    The algebra of functions includes objects such as f + g,f - g, fog, fg, and f-1. For the value of f + g at x, write f (x) + g(x); for the value of the composition of two defined functions f and g, write f (g(x)) or $\left(\vphantom{
f\circ g}\right.$fog$\left.\vphantom{
f\circ g}\right)$$\left(\vphantom{ x}\right.$x$\left.\vphantom{ x}\right)$; and for the value of the product of two defined functions, write f (x)g(x). You can obtain the inverse (or inverse relation) for some functions f (x) by applying Solve + Exact to the equation f (y) = x and specifying y as the Variable to Solve for.