Hopefully this experience will at least make you realize that it's futile to try to prove a statement without using the definition of the terms and notations in the statement. You were supposed to prove a statement about a specific vector space denoted by F(ℝ). (You wrote ##F(\Re)## in post #1, but ℝ is the standard notation for the set of real numbers). So you absolutely have to use the definition of F(ℝ). If you don't, then there's no reason to think that whatever you have managed to prove has anything to do with F(ℝ).
By the way, I have answered two very similar questions in the last week, and both of those guys made the exact same mistakes you did: 1. They ignored the definition of the vector space they were working with. 2. They made statements about variables without assigning them values or saying "for all" or "there exists". 3. When they were supposed to verify that the zero vector was in the subset, they started considering stuff like f(0).
1 and 2 are probably the two most common mistakes made by people who are just starting out with proofs. 1 is a huge mistake, pretty much the biggest one you can make next to assuming that the statement you want to prove is true. 3 is a mistake that you wouldn't make if you hadn't already made mistake 1.