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Hey, thanks for your reply! I don't fully get it. Sorry but could you explain further with full working out please?Suppose polynomial p lies inand polynomial q lies in
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For a solid proof I would do the following:
Show for cases where n = 1 and m = 1, n = k, m = r.
Then use induction, n = k+1, m = r+1. State that if p and q are both continuous for all complex/real inputs (can't remember which course where you can assume all polynomials are in complex sets) then the composite is also continuous.
Thenbecomes a polynomial that lies in
As an engineer I would totally look at it and see what the resultant dimension for the manipulation is for any arbitrary m and n, then skip the proof part.
For b), check the definition for polynomials and mention continuity. You can use the result from part a) to help.
I could be wrong with a few things here as it's been a very long time since I touched this sort of maths.
Hey, thanks for your reply! I don't fully get it. Sorry but could you explain further with full working out please?
Both of these use the intermediate value theorem (IVT).Hey can anyone help me with these 2?
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