Bounded function

In mathematics, a function f defined on some set X with real or complex values is called bounded, if the set of its values is bounded. In other words, there exists a number M>0 such that

|f(x)|\le M

for all x in X.

An important special case is a bounded sequence, where X is taken to be the set N of natural numbers. Thus a sequence f = ( a0, a1, a2, ... ) is bounded if there exists a number M > 0 such that

|an| ≤ M

for every natural number n. The set of all bounded sequences, equipped with a vector space structure, forms a sequence space.

This definition can be extended to functions taking values in a metric space Y. Then the inequality above is replaced with

d(f(x), a)\le M

for some a in Y, M>0, and for all x in X.

Examples

f(x)=\frac{1}{x^2-1}

defined for all real x which do not equal −1 or 1 is not bounded. As x gets closer to −1 or to 1, the values of this function get larger and larger in magnitude. This function can be made bounded if one considers its domain to be for example [2, ∞).

f(x)=\frac{1}{x^2+1}

defined for all real x is bounded.

See also: Bounded function, Bounded set, Complex number, Continuous function, For all, Function (mathematics), Inequality, Irrational number, Mathematics, Metric space