mathlover1
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Somebody find the mistake here:
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1=\sqrt{1}=\sqrt{(-1)(-1)}=\sqrt{(-1)^2}=-1 \Rightarrow 1=-1<br />
DaveC426913 said:The root of 1 is 1, not -1.
mathlover1 said:yes it's -1 because (-1)^2=1 from the definition ;)
mathlover1 said:Well-done Njama, your answer is the correct one.
Not true.Borek said:Square root of 1 is not 1, it is either 1 or -1.
Not true.mathlover1 said:yes it's -1 because (-1)^2=1 from the definition ;)
True! \sqrt{x}[/itex], as a real valued <b>function</b>, must have only one value for each x and it is defined as "the positive number y such that y^2= x"<br /> <blockquote data-attributes="" data-quote="mathlover1" data-source="post: 2761199" class="bbCodeBlock bbCodeBlock--expandable bbCodeBlock--quote js-expandWatch"> <div class="bbCodeBlock-title"> mathlover1 said: </div> <div class="bbCodeBlock-content"> <div class="bbCodeBlock-expandContent js-expandContent "> Well-done Njama, your answer is the correct one. </div> </div> </blockquote> Then why did you deny it in your post quoted above?njama said:The error is here
<br /> \sqrt{(-1)^2} \neq -1<br />
\sqrt{(-1)^2} = |-1|=1