Monotonically increasing/decreasing functions

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The discussion focuses on determining whether the function h(x) = f(2x) + f(x) is monotonically increasing or decreasing. Two primary methods are outlined: first, by taking the derivative of h(x) and analyzing critical points on a number line; second, by evaluating the expression h(x + Δx) - h(x) to establish monotonicity. It is emphasized that if h(x + Δx) - h(x) is positive for all Δx > 0, then h(x) is monotonically increasing. Additional information about the function f(x) is necessary for a complete analysis.

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whenever a function is expressed in terms of another function,how do we find whether the function is increasing or decreasing?

say ,for example ,we have :

h(x)= f(2x)+f(x)

pls tell anyone,what procedure we need to follow to find whether the above given function is increasing/monotonically increasing or decreasing/monotonically decreasing.thanks !
 
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There are two ways that I can think of. Assuming that the function is continuously differentiable, take the derivative and set equal to 0. Make a number line and test a point between every 0 to see if it's increasing or decreasing. Also, if there is no zero, then you have a monotonic increasing/decreasing function automatically.

Assuming your function is h(x), the other way is to consider h(x+a) - h(x), where a is an arbitrary positive number. If you can show that h(x+a) - h(x) is positive, then h is monotonically increasing.
 
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To show that f is monotonically increasing, we need to show that for any \Delta{x} > 0, f(x + \Delta{x}) > f(x) for all x in the domain; or equivalently, f(x + \Delta{x}) - f(x) > 0. An equivalent definition is that f(x_1) < f(x_2) for all x_1, x_2 in the domain of f with x_1 < x_2.

For your problem, try to evaluate h(x + \Delta{x}) - h(x) with the assumption f(x + \Delta{x}) > f(x).
But I think you need more information about f(x) to solve this.
 

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