I want to prove the monotonicity of the following function WITHOUT using derivatives.
f(x)=x²-4x+3, on the interval [-1,1]
I tried this:
Let x1<x2, numbers of the interval, where x1<x2
x1²<x2²
add -4x to both sides.
x1²-4x1>x2²-4x2
ADD 3 : x1²-4x1+3>x2²-4x2+3
f(x1)>f(x2)
so because we started with x1<x2 and ended with f(x1)>f(x2) the function is strictly decreasing.
Any ideas whether this is correct, and if there are any other ways of solving this without differentiating.
f(x)=x²-4x+3, on the interval [-1,1]
I tried this:
Let x1<x2, numbers of the interval, where x1<x2
x1²<x2²
add -4x to both sides.
x1²-4x1>x2²-4x2
ADD 3 : x1²-4x1+3>x2²-4x2+3
f(x1)>f(x2)
so because we started with x1<x2 and ended with f(x1)>f(x2) the function is strictly decreasing.
Any ideas whether this is correct, and if there are any other ways of solving this without differentiating.