Back to School: Analyzing e^x and its Variations

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The discussion focuses on whether the function e^x is even or odd, with participants analyzing the definitions of these types of functions. It is concluded that e^x is neither even nor odd, as substituting -x into the function does not satisfy the conditions for either classification. The expressions e^x + e^-x and e^x - e^-x are examined, revealing that the former is even and the latter is odd. Graphical representation is suggested as a method to further understand the symmetry properties of these functions. Overall, the conversation emphasizes the importance of applying definitions and exploring graphical interpretations in function analysis.
thenewbosco
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just starting up the school year again and my brain is not there yet.

Is e^x an even or odd function.

also what about
e^x + e^-x

and

e^x - e^-x

thanks for the help.
 
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Have you tried to apply the definitions of even and odd functions? Where does it get you?
 
it gets me nowhere. applying the definition and inserting -x into e^x just gives (1/e^x) which is neither f(x) nor -f(x).
 
a function is even iff f(-x) = f(x), for example cos(x)
a function is odd iff f(-x) = -f(x), for example sin(x)

exp(-x) <> exp(x) <> -exp(x), so exp(x) is neither
exp(-x)+exp(x) = exp(x)+exp(-x), so exp(x)+exp(-x) is even (=2cos(x))
exp(-x)-exp(x) = -(exp(x)-exp(-x)), so exp(x)-exp(-x) is odd (=2isin(x))
 
Another approach, graphically. An even function is symmetric to the y-axis, an odd function symmetric to the origin. Graph you functions and see what you come up with.
 
thenewbosco said:
...which is neither f(x) nor -f(x).

It's possible for a function to be neither even nor odd.
 
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