- #1
jdinatale
- 155
- 0
I typed the problem in latex and will add comments below each image.
The supremum of |1 - x| seems dependent on the interval [a, b]. For instance, if [a, b] = [-500, 1], then 501 is the supremum of |1 - x|. But if [a, b] = [-1, 500], then 499 is the supremum of [1 - x]. So what should I say?
For this one, I'm not sure if I did it correctly. So could someone just verify that my solution is correct?
I'm really not sure how to do this one. I'm trying to relate it to the unit circle from trigonometry, but that had an x and y coordinate...For this one, would I just choose sample points (1, 0), (0, 1), (-1, 0), and (0, -1) and sketch the norm at each of these? But the norm only takes 1 value, not two...
The supremum of |1 - x| seems dependent on the interval [a, b]. For instance, if [a, b] = [-500, 1], then 501 is the supremum of |1 - x|. But if [a, b] = [-1, 500], then 499 is the supremum of [1 - x]. So what should I say?
For this one, I'm not sure if I did it correctly. So could someone just verify that my solution is correct?
I'm really not sure how to do this one. I'm trying to relate it to the unit circle from trigonometry, but that had an x and y coordinate...For this one, would I just choose sample points (1, 0), (0, 1), (-1, 0), and (0, -1) and sketch the norm at each of these? But the norm only takes 1 value, not two...