Given below are two statements :
Statement I : The function $f: \mathbb{R} \to \mathbb{R}$ defined by $f(x) = \frac{x}{1 + |x|}$ is one-one.
Statement II : The function $f: \mathbb{R} \to \mathbb{R}$ defined by $f(x) = \frac{x^2 + 4x - 30}{x^2 - 8x + 18}$ is many-one.
In the light of the above statements, choose the correct answer from the options given below :
Statement I is true but Statement II is false
Both Statement I and Statement II are false
Both Statement I and Statement II are true
Statement I is false but Statement II is true
The sum of all the elements in the range of $f(x) = \text{Sgn}(\sin x) + \text{Sgn}(\cos x) + \text{Sgn}(\tan x) + \text{Sgn}(\cot x)$, $x \neq \frac{n\pi}{2}, n \in \mathbb{Z}$, where
$\text{Sgn}(t) = \begin{cases} 1, & \text{if } t > 0 \\ -1, & \text{if } t < 0 \end{cases}$
is :
4
0
2
-2
$\frac{7}{2}$
$-\frac{25}{6}$
$\frac{25}{6}$
$-\frac{7}{2}$
Let $f$ be a function such that $3 f(x)+2 f\left(\frac{m}{19 x}\right)=5 x, x \neq 0$, where $m=\sum\limits_{i=1}^9(i)^2$. Then $f(5)-f(2)$ is equal to
36
9
-9
18
Let $f(x)=[x]^2-[x+3]-3, x \in \mathbf{R}$, where [.] is the greatest integer funtion. Then
$f(x)=0$ for finitely many values of $x$
$f(x)<0$ only for $x \in[-1,3)$
$\int\limits_0^2 f(x) \mathrm{d} x=-6$
$f(x)>0$ only for $x \in[4, \infty)$
Let the domain of the function $f(x)=\log _3 \log _5\left(7-\log _2\left(x^2-10 x+85\right)\right)+\sin ^{-1}\left(\left|\frac{3 x-7}{17-x}\right|\right)$ be $(\alpha, \beta]$. Then $\alpha+\beta$ is equal to :
12
8
10
9
Let $f$ and $g$ be functions satisfying $f(x+y)=f(x) f(y), f(1)=7$ and $g(x+y)=g(x y), g(1)=1$, for all $x, y \in \mathbf{N}$. If $\sum\limits_{x=1}^{\mathrm{n}}\left(\frac{f(x)}{\mathrm{g}(x)}\right)=19607$, then n is equal to :
6
7
4
5
If the domain of the function $f(x)=\sin ^{-1}\left(\frac{5-x}{3+2 x}\right)+\frac{1}{\log _e(10-x)}$ is $(-\infty, \alpha] \cup[\beta, \gamma)-\{\delta\}$, then $6(\alpha+\beta+\gamma+\delta)$ is equal to
66
68
70
67
Let $\mathbb{N}$ denote the set of all positive integers. Consider the sets
$ A=\{1,2,3,4,5\} \text { and } B=\{1,2,3,4,5,6,7\} . $
Let $S$ be the set of all functions $f: A \rightarrow B$ such that $f(2) \neq 2$ and $f(4) \neq 4$. Consider the set $T=\left\{f \in S:\right.$ there exists a function $g: B \rightarrow \mathbb{N}$ such that $g(f(x))=2^x$ for all $\left.x \in A\right\}$.
Then the number of elements in the set $T$ is $\_\_\_\_$ .
Explanation:
From the condition $ g(f(x)) = 2^x $ for all $ x \in A $, we can see that if two different values of $ x $ had the same $ f(x) $, then $ g $ would have to assign the same value to two different powers of 2. This is not possible because each $ 2^x $ is unique.
Therefore, $ f $ must be a one-one (injective) function from $ A $ to $ B $.
To find the total number of one-one functions from a set of 5 elements ($ A $) to a set of 7 elements ($ B $), we first choose any 5 elements from 7 and then arrange them. Hence,
$ \text{Total one-one functions} = {}^7C_5 \times 5! = 21 \times 120 = 2520 $
Now we subtract the functions that do not satisfy the given conditions: $ f(2) \neq 2 $ and $ f(4) \neq 4 $.
Functions where $ f(2)=2 $: choose images for remaining 4 elements of $ A $ from the remaining 6 elements of $ B $, and arrange them.
$ {}^6C_4 \times 4! = 15 \times 24 = 360 $
Similarly, functions where $ f(4)=4 $ are also $ 360 $ in number.
Functions where both $ f(2)=2 $ and $ f(4)=4 $: we choose images for the remaining 3 elements from the remaining 5 elements of $ B $, and arrange them.
$ {}^5C_3 \times 3! = 10 \times 6 = 60 $
By the principle of inclusion and exclusion:
$ \text{Required number of functions} = 2520 - (360 + 360) + 60 = 1860 $
If the range of the function $ f(x) = \frac{5-x}{x^2 - 3x + 2} , \ x \neq 1, 2, $ is $ (-\infty , \alpha] \cup [\beta, \infty) $, then $ \alpha^2 + \beta^2 $ is equal to :
188
192
190
194
Let the domains of the functions $f(x)=\log _4 \log _3 \log _7\left(8-\log _2\left(x^2+4 x+5\right)\right)$ and $\mathrm{g}(x)=\sin ^{-1}\left(\frac{7 x+10}{x-2}\right)$ be $(\alpha, \beta)$ and $[\gamma, \delta]$, respectively. Then $\alpha^2+\beta^2+\gamma^2+\delta^2$ is equal to :
Let $f, g:(1, \infty) \rightarrow \mathbb{R}$ be defined as $f(x)=\frac{2 x+3}{5 x+2}$ and $g(x)=\frac{2-3 x}{1-x}$. If the range of the function fog: $[2,4] \rightarrow \mathbb{R}$ is $[\alpha, \beta]$, then $\frac{1}{\beta-\alpha}$ is equal to
If the domain of the function $f(x)=\log _7\left(1-\log _4\left(x^2-9 x+18\right)\right)$ is $(\alpha, \beta) \cup(\gamma, o)$, then $\alpha+\beta+\gamma+\hat{o}$ is equal to
If the domain of the function $ \log_5(18x - x^2 - 77) $ is $ (\alpha, \beta) $ and the domain of the function $ \log_{(x-1)} \left( \frac{2x^2 + 3x - 2}{x^2 - 3x - 4} \right) $ is $(\gamma, \delta)$, then $ \alpha^2 + \beta^2 + \gamma^2 $ is equal to:
186
179
195
174
29
31
30
36
If $f(x)=\frac{2^x}{2^x+\sqrt{2}}, \mathrm{x} \in \mathbb{R}$, then $\sum_\limits{\mathrm{k}=1}^{81} f\left(\frac{\mathrm{k}}{82}\right)$ is equal to
Let $f: \mathbb{R} \rightarrow \mathbb{R}$ be a function defined by $f(x)=(2+3 a) x^2+\left(\frac{a+2}{a-1}\right) x+b, a \neq 1$. If $f(x+y)=f(x)+f(\mathrm{y})+1-\frac{2}{7} x \mathrm{y}$, then the value of $28 \sum\limits_{i=1}^5|f(i)|$ is
The function $f:(-\infty, \infty) \rightarrow(-\infty, 1)$, defined by $f(x)=\frac{2^x-2^{-x}}{2^x+2^{-x}}$ is :
Let $f(x)=\frac{2^{x+2}+16}{2^{2 x+1}+2^{x+4}+32}$. Then the value of $8\left(f\left(\frac{1}{15}\right)+f\left(\frac{2}{15}\right)+\ldots+f\left(\frac{59}{15}\right)\right)$ is equal to
Let $f(x)=\log _{\mathrm{e}} x$ and $g(x)=\frac{x^4-2 x^3+3 x^2-2 x+2}{2 x^2-2 x+1}$. Then the domain of $f \circ g$ is
Let $\mathrm{A}=\{1,2,3,4\}$ and $\mathrm{B}=\{1,4,9,16\}$. Then the number of many-one functions $f: \mathrm{A} \rightarrow \mathrm{B}$ such that $1 \in f(\mathrm{~A})$ is equal to :
Let the domain of the function $f(x)=\cos ^{-1}\left(\frac{4 x+5}{3 x-7}\right)$ be $[\alpha, \beta]$ and the domain of $g(x)=\log _2\left(2-6 \log _{27}(2 x+5)\right)$ be $(\gamma, \delta)$.
Then $|7(\alpha+\beta)+4(\gamma+\delta)|$ is equal to ______________.
Explanation:
$\begin{aligned} & f(x)=\cos ^{-1}\left(\frac{4 x+5}{3 x-7}\right) \\ & \Rightarrow-1 \leq\left(\frac{4 x+5}{3 x-7}\right) \leq 1 \\ & \left(\frac{4 x+5}{3 x-7}\right) \geq-1 \\ & \frac{4 x+5+3 x-7}{3 x-7} \geq 0 \\ & \Rightarrow \frac{7 x-2}{3 x-7} \geq 0 \end{aligned}$

$\begin{aligned} & x \in\left(-\infty, \frac{2}{7}\right] \cup\left(\frac{7}{3}, \infty\right) \\ & \& \frac{4 x+5}{3 x-7} \leq 1 \Rightarrow \frac{x+12}{3 x-7} \leq 0 \end{aligned}$

$\therefore$ Domain of $\mathrm{f}(\mathrm{x})$ is
$\left[-12, \frac{2}{7}\right] \alpha=-12, \beta=\frac{2}{7}$
$g(x)=\log _2\left(2-6 \log _{27}(2 x+5)\right)$
Domain
$2-6 \log _{27}(2 x+5)>0$
$\begin{array}{ll} \Rightarrow & 6 \log _{27}(2 \mathrm{x}+5)<2 \\ \Rightarrow & \log _{27}(2 \mathrm{x}+5)<\frac{1}{3} \\ \Rightarrow & 2 \mathrm{x}+5<3 \\ \Rightarrow & \mathrm{x}<-1 \end{array}$
$\& 2 x+5>0 \Rightarrow x>-\frac{5}{2}$
Domain is $\mathrm{x} \in\left(-\frac{5}{2},-1\right)$
$\begin{aligned} &\gamma=-\frac{5}{2}, \delta=-1\\ &\begin{aligned} & |7(\alpha+\beta)+4(\gamma+\delta)|=\left\lvert\, 7\left(\left.-12+\frac{2}{7}+4\left(-\frac{5}{2}-1\right) \right\rvert\,\right.\right. \\ & |-82-14|=96 \end{aligned} \end{aligned}$
Let $\mathbb{R}$ denote the set of all real numbers. Let $f: \mathbb{R} \rightarrow \mathbb{R}$ and $g: \mathbb{R} \rightarrow(0,4)$ be functions defined by
$ f(x)=\log _e\left(x^2+2 x+4\right), \text { and } g(x)=\frac{4}{1+e^{-2 x}} $
Define the composite function $f \circ g^{-1}$ by $\left(f \circ g^{-1}\right)(x)=f\left(g^{-1}(x)\right)$, where $g^{-1}$ is the inverse of the function $g$.
Then the value of the derivative of the composite function $f \circ g^{-1}$ at $x=2$ is ________________.
Explanation:
Function $ f $:
$ f(x) = \log_e\left(x^2 + 2x + 4\right) = \log_e\left[(x+1)^2 + 3\right] $
Function $ g $:
$ g(x) = \frac{4}{1 + e^{-2x}} $
To find the inverse of $ g $, $ g^{-1} $, we solve for $ x $:
Start with $ y = \frac{4}{1 + e^{-2x}} $.
Rearranging gives $ 1 + e^{-2x} = \frac{4}{y} $.
Solving for $ e^{-2x} $, we have $ e^{-2x} = \frac{4}{y} - 1 $.
Taking the natural logarithm, we find $ -2x = \ln\left(\frac{4}{y} - 1\right) $.
Thus, we solve for $ x $:
$ x = -\frac{1}{2} \ln\left(\frac{4-y}{y}\right) = \frac{1}{2} \ln\left(\frac{y}{4-y}\right) $
So, the inverse function:
$ g^{-1}(x) = \frac{1}{2} \ln\left(\frac{x}{4-x}\right) $
Now, let's evaluate $ g^{-1}(2) $:
$ g^{-1}(2) = \frac{1}{2} \ln\left(\frac{2}{4-2}\right) = \frac{1}{2} \ln(1) = 0 $
Thus, $ f(g^{-1}(x)) = f\left(\frac{1}{2} \ln\left(\frac{x}{4-x}\right)\right) $.
Next, we differentiate $ f \circ g^{-1} $:
$ \frac{d}{dx}\left(f(g^{-1}(x))\right) = \frac{d}{dx}\left[\log_e\left(\left(g^{-1}(x) + 1\right)^2 + 3\right)\right] $
Using the chain rule, the derivative is:
$ \frac{1}{\left[\left(g^{-1}(x) + 1\right)^2 + 3\right]} \cdot 2 \left(g^{-1}(x) + 1\right) \cdot \frac{d}{dx}\left(g^{-1}(x)\right) $
Calculate the derivative of $ g^{-1}(x) $:
$ \frac{d}{dx}\left(\frac{1}{2} \ln\left(\frac{x}{4-x}\right)\right) = \frac{1}{2} \cdot \frac{1}{\frac{x}{4-x}} \cdot \left(\frac{(4-x)x' + x(4-x)'}{(4-x)^2}\right) $
Evaluate at $ x = 2 $:
$ g^{-1}(2) = 0 $ means $ \left(g^{-1}(2) + 1\right)^2 + 3 = 4 $.
At $ x = 2 $:
$ \frac{d}{dx} f(g^{-1}(x))\big|_{x=2} = \frac{2}{4} \cdot \frac{2}{4} = \frac{1}{4} = 0.25 $
Therefore, the value of the derivative of the composite function $ f \circ g^{-1} $ at $ x = 2 $ is $ 0.25 $.
Let ℝ denote the set of all real numbers. Let f: ℝ → ℝ be a function such that f(x) > 0 for all x ∈ ℝ, and f(x+y) = f(x)f(y) for all x, y ∈ ℝ.
Let the real numbers a₁, a₂, ..., a₅₀ be in an arithmetic progression. If f(a₃₁) = 64f(a₂₅), and
$ \sum\limits_{i=1}^{50} f(a_i) = 3(2^{25}+1), $
then the value of
$ \sum\limits_{i=6}^{30} f(a_i) $
is ________________.
Let ℕ denote the set of all natural numbers, and ℤ denote the set of all integers. Consider the functions f: ℕ → ℤ and g: ℤ → ℕ defined by
$ f(n) = \begin{cases} \frac{(n + 1)}{2} & \text{if } n \text{ is odd,} \\ \frac{(4-n)}{2} & \text{if } n \text{ is even,} \end{cases} $
and
$ g(n) = \begin{cases} 3 + 2n & \text{if } n \ge 0 , \\ -2n & \text{if } n < 0 . \end{cases} $
Define $(g \circ f)(n) = g(f(n))$ for all $n \in \mathbb{N}$, and $(f \circ g)(n) = f(g(n))$ for all $n \in \mathbb{Z}$.
Then which of the following statements is (are) TRUE?
g $\circ $ f is NOT one-one and g $\circ $ f is NOT onto
f $\circ $ g is NOT one-one but f $\circ $ g is onto
g is one-one and g is onto
f is NOT one-one but f is onto
The domain and range of $f(x)=\frac{1}{\sqrt{|x|-x^2}}$ are $A$ and $B$ respectively. Then $A \cup B=$
$R-\{-1,0,1\}$
$(-1, \infty)-\{0,1\}$
$(-1,0) \cup(0,1) \cup[2, \infty)$
$(-1,1) \cup[2, \infty)$
A function $f: R \rightarrow R$ defined by
$ f(x)=\left\{\begin{array}{c} 2 x+3, x \leq \frac{4}{3} \\ -3 x^2+8 x, x>\frac{4}{3} \end{array}\right. \text { is } $
One-one function
Not onto
A bijective function
Constant function
If $2^{4 n+3}+3^{3 n+1}$ is divisible by $P$ for all natural numbers $n$, then $P$ is
an even integer
an odd integer, not a prime
an odd prime integer
an integer less than 9
Consider the following statements
Statement $\mathrm{I} \cosh ^{-1} x=\tanh ^{-1} x$ has no solution
Statement II $\cosh ^{-1} x=\operatorname{coth}^{-1} x$ has only one solution
The correct answer is
Both statements I and II are true.
Both statements I and II are false.
Statement I is true, but statement II is false.
Statement I is false, but statement II is true.
The domain of the real valued function $f(x)=\log _{\sqrt{2}}\left(\sqrt{x^2+x}+\sqrt{x^2-x}\right)$ is
$[-1,1]$
$(-\infty,-1] \cup[1, \infty)$
$(-\infty, \infty)$
$(0, \infty)$
If $\frac{x+1}{x^3(x-1)}=\frac{a}{x}+\frac{b}{x^2}+\frac{c}{x^3}+\frac{d}{x-1}$, then
$a=b=c=-d$
$a=b=2 c=-d$
$a=2 b=c=-d$
$a=b=2 c=d$
Let $f: R \rightarrow R$ be defined by $f(x)=5^{-|x|}+\operatorname{sgn}\left(5^{-x}\right)$, where sgn $x$ denotes signum function of $x$. Then $f$ is
One-one but not onto
Onto but not one-one
Both one-one and onto
Neither one-one nor onto
If the range of the real valued function $f(x)=\frac{x^2+x+k}{x^2-x+k}$ is $\left[\frac{1}{3}, 3\right]$, then $k=$
-2
-1
1
2
For a real number ' $a$ ', if a real valued function $f(x)=4 x^3+a x^2+3 x-2$ is monotonic in its domain, then the range of ' $a$ ' is
$(-6,6)$
Empty set
$(-2,2)$
$(2,4)$
If $D \subseteq R$ and $f: D \rightarrow R$ defined by $f(x)=\frac{x^2+x+a}{x^2-x+a}$ is a surjection, then ' $a$ ' lies in the interval.
$R$
$(0, \infty)$
$(-\infty, 0)$
$(0,1)$
If the domain of the real valued function $f(x)=\frac{1}{\sqrt{\log _{\frac{1}{3}}\left(\frac{x-1}{2-x}\right)}}$ is $(a, b)$, then $2 b=$
$a-1$
$a$
$a+1$
$a+2$
A real valued function $f:[4, \infty) \rightarrow R$ is defined as $f(x)=\left(x^2+x+1\right)^{\left(x^2-3 x-4\right)}$, then $f$ is
monotonically decreasing function
monotonically increasing function
increasing in $(4,5)$ and decreasing in $(5, \infty)$
decreasing in $(4,5)$ and increasing in $(5, \infty)$
If $f: R-\{0\} \rightarrow R$ is defined by $3 f(x)+4 f\left(\frac{1}{x}\right)=\frac{2-x}{x}$ then $f(3)=$
6
12
9
3
The inverse of the function $y=\frac{10^x-10^{-x}}{10^x+10^{-x}}+1$ is $x=$
$\log \left(\frac{y}{2-y}\right)$
$\log _{10}\left(\frac{y}{2-y}\right)$
$\frac{1}{10} \log \left(\frac{y}{1-y}\right)$
$\frac{1}{2} \log _{10}\left(\frac{y}{2-y}\right)$
If $f(x)=\tan \left(\frac{\pi}{\sqrt{x+1}+4}\right)$ is a real valued function, then the range of $f$ is
$[-1,1]$
$(0,1]$
$[-1, \infty)$
$R$
If $\frac{x^3+3}{(x-3)^3}=a+\frac{b}{x-3}+\frac{c}{(x-3)^2}+\frac{d}{(x-3)^3}$, then $(a+d)-(b+c)=$
49
15
-30
-5
The domain of the real valued function $f(x)=\frac{3}{4-x^2}+\log _{10}\left(x^3-x\right)$ is
$(1,2) \cup(2, \infty)$
$(-1,0) \cup(1,2)$
$(-1,0) \cup(1,2) \cup(2, \infty)$
$(-\infty,-1) \cup(1,2) \cup(2, \infty)$
A real valued function $f: A \rightarrow B$ defined by $f(x)=\frac{4-x^2}{4+x^2} \forall x \in A$ is a bijection. If $-4 \in A$, then $A \cap B=$
$(-1,1]$
$[0,1]$
$[0, \infty)$
$(-1,0]$
Let $f(x)=x^2+2 b x+2 c^2$ and $g(x)=-x^2-2 c x+b^2 . x \in R$. If $b$ and $c$ are non-zero real numbers such that min $f(x)>\max g(x)$, then $\left|\frac{c}{b}\right|$ lies in the interval
$\left(\frac{1}{2}, \frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}\right)$
$\left(\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}, \sqrt{2}\right)$
$(\sqrt{2}, \infty)$
$(0,1)$
If $f: R \rightarrow A$, defined by $f(x)=\cos x+\sqrt{3} \sin x-1$ is an onto function then $A=$
$[-1,2]$
$[-\sqrt{3}, \sqrt{3}]$
$[-3,1]$
$[-2,2]$
Let $g(x)=1+x-[x]$ and ${ }^{\prime}$
$ f(x)= \begin{cases}-1, & x<0 \\ 0, & x=0,[x] \text { denotes the greatest integer less } \\ 1, & x>0\end{cases} $
than or equal to $x$. Then for all $x, f(g(x))=$
1
$x$
$f(x)$
$g(x)$
Let [ $x$ ] represent the greatest integer less than or equal to $x,\{x\}=x-[x] \sqrt{2}=1.414$ and $\sqrt{3}=1.732$. If $f(x)=\left\{x+\left[\frac{x}{1+x^2}\right]\right\}$ is a real valued function, then $f(\sqrt{2})+f(-\sqrt{3})=$
0.682
0.318
0.146
1.146








