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Identity function
In mathematics, an identity function, also called an identity relation, identity map or identity transformation, is a function that always returns the value that was used as its argument, unchanged. That is, when f is the identity function, the equality f(x) = x is true for all values of x to which f can be applied.
Definition
Formally, if X is a set, the identity function f on X is defined to be a function with X as its domain and codomain, satisfying In other words, the function value f(x) in the codomain X is always the same as the input element x in the domain X . The identity function on X is clearly an injective function as well as a surjective function (its codomain is also its range), so it is bijective. The identity function f on X is often denoted by idX . In set theory, where a function is defined as a particular kind of binary relation, the identity function is given by the identity relation, or diagonal of X .
Algebraic properties
If f : X → Y is any function, then f ∘ idX = f = idY ∘ f , where "∘" denotes function composition. In particular, idX is the identity element of the monoid of all functions from X to X (under function composition). Since the identity element of a monoid is unique, one can alternately define the identity function on M to be this identity element. Such a definition generalizes to the concept of an identity morphism in category theory, where the endomorphisms of M need not be functions.
Properties
In , regardless of the basis chosen for the space. C1 ).
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