What is the meaning of a unique inverse for a bijective function?

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In the discussion about the uniqueness of inverses for bijective functions, participants clarify that "unique" refers to the existence of only one inverse for each element in the function. A bijective function ensures a one-to-one correspondence, meaning each output is mapped to a single input. The conversation emphasizes that if a function f has inverses g and h, then g must equal h for all x in the function's range. The use of the definite article "the" signifies that there is only one specific inverse. Overall, the thread concludes that a bijective function guarantees a unique inverse that satisfies the defined properties.
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What does "unique" mean?

I ran into a trivial exercise. If a function f is bijective, show that it has an inverse. That's easy. But then, the question goes: if f has an inverse, show that it is unique.

I'm not really sure what is meant by "unique." I would assume it is has to do with the function's one-to-one correspondence. That each element in the function is taken cared of (mapped) one at a time. Is this a good analogy? This is not homework by the way.
 
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It means there is only one inverse. In other words if a function, f, has inverses g and h, then g=h, and there is really only one inverse.
 
And, of course, "g= h" mean g(x)= h(x) for every x in the range of f.
 
That makes sense, thanks.
 
waht said:
I ran into a trivial exercise. If a function f is bijective, show that it has an inverse. That's easy. But then, the question goes: if f has an inverse, show that it is unique.

I'm not really sure what is meant by "unique." I would assume it is has to do with the function's one-to-one correspondence. That each element in the function is taken cared of (mapped) one at a time. Is this a good analogy? This is not homework by the way.

x is unique means, there is one and only one thing that x is.

'The' in the particular, in the singular, is the meaning of 'unique'.

The definite article 'the' refers to that one and only x.

The x such that Fx, is that (unique) x which satisfies Fx.

That there is only one x which satisfies Fx is defined:
EyAx(x=y <-> Fx).

The unique x which is F has the property G, means, EyAx((x=y <-> Fx) & Gy).
 
Well, I'm glad we got that clarified!
 
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