An injective function is called an injection, and is also said to be a one-to-one function (not to be confused with one-to-one correspondence, i.e. a bijective function). Occasionally, an injective function from X to Y is denoted f: X ↣ Y, using an arrow with a barbed tail. Alternately, it may be denoted YX using a notation derived from that used for falling factorial powers, since if X and Y are finite sets with respectively x and y elements, the number of injections X ↣ Y is yx (see the twelvefold way).
A function f that is not injective is sometimes called many-to-one. (However, this terminology is also sometimes used to mean "single-valued", i.e., each argument is mapped to at most one value; this is the case for any function, but is used to stress the opposition with multi-valued functions, which are not true functions.)
A monomorphism is a generalization of an injective function in category theory.
Definition
Let f be a function whose domain is a set A. The function f is injective if for all a and b in A, if f(a) = f(b), then a = b; that is, f(a) = f(b) implies a = b. Equivalently, if a ≠ b, then f(a) ≠ f(b).Examples
- For any set X and any subset S of X the inclusion map S → X (which sends any element s of S to itself) is injective. In particular the identity function X → X is always injective (and in fact bijective).
- The function f : R → R defined by f(x) = 2x + 1 is injective.
- The function g : R → R defined by g(x) = x2 is not injective, because (for example) g(1) = 1 = g(−1). However, if g is redefined so that its domain is the non-negative real numbers [0,+∞), then g is injective.
- The exponential function exp : R → R defined by exp(x) = ex is injective (but not surjective as no value maps to a negative number).
- The natural logarithm function ln : (0, ∞) → R defined by x ↦ ln x is injective.
- The function g : R → R defined by g(x) = xn − x is not injective, since, for example, g(0) = g(1).
Injections can be undone
Functions with left inverses are always injections. That is, given f : X → Y, if there is a function g : Y → X such that, for every x ∈ X- g(f(x)) = x (f can be undone by g)
Conversely, every injection f with non-empty domain has a left inverse g (in conventional mathematics[1]). Note that g may not be a complete inverse of f because the composition in the other order, f ∘ g, may not be the identity on Y. In other words, a function that can be undone or "reversed", such as f, is not necessarily invertible (bijective). Injections are "reversible" but not always invertible.
Although it is impossible to reverse a non-injective (and therefore information-losing) function, one can at least obtain a "quasi-inverse" of it, that is a multiple-valued function.
Injections may be made invertible
In fact, to turn an injective function f : X → Y into a bijective (hence invertible) function, it suffices to replace its codomain Y by its actual range J = f(X). That is, let g : X → J such that g(x) = f(x) for all x in X; then g is bijective. Indeed, f can be factored as inclJ,Y ∘ g, where inclJ,Y is the inclusion function from J into Y.Other properties
- If f and g are both injective, then f ∘ g is injective.
- If g ∘ f is injective, then f is injective (but g need not be).
- f : X → Y is injective if and only if, given any functions g, h : W → X, whenever f ∘ g = f ∘ h, then g = h. In other words, injective functions are precisely the monomorphisms in the category Set of sets.
- If f : X → Y is injective and A is a subset of X, then f −1(f(A)) = A. Thus, A can be recovered from its image f(A).
- If f : X → Y is injective and A and B are both subsets of X, then f(A ∩ B) = f(A) ∩ f(B).
- Every function h : W → Y can be decomposed as h = f ∘ g for a suitable injection f and surjection g. This decomposition is unique up to isomorphism, and f may be thought of as the inclusion function of the range h(W) of h as a subset of the codomain Y of h.
- If f : X → Y is an injective function, then Y has at least as many elements as X, in the sense of cardinal numbers. In particular, if, in addition, there is an injection from Y to X, then X and Y has the same cardinal number. (This is known as the Cantor–Bernstein–Schroeder theorem.)
- If both X and Y are finite with the same number of elements, then f : X → Y is injective if and only if f is surjective (in which case they are bijective).
- An injective function which is a homomorphism between two algebraic structures is an embedding.
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