A 
function f: 
X → 
Y is called 
injective or 
one-to-one or an 
injection if for every 
y in the 
codomain Y there is at most one 
x in the 
domain X with 
f(
x) = 
y.
Put another way, given 
x and 
x' in 
X, if 
f(
x) = 
f(
x'), then it follows that 
x = 
x'.
 
Surjective, not injective | 
 
Injective, not surjective | 
 
Bijective | 
 
Not surjective, not injective | 
When X and Y are both the real line R, then an injective function f: R → R can be visualized as one whose graph is never intersected by any horizontal line more than once.
(This is the horizontal line test.)
Consider the function f: R → R defined by f(x) = 2x + 1.
This function is injective, since given arbitrary real numbers x and x', if 2x + 1 = 2x' + 1, then 2x = 2x', so x = x'.
On the other hand, the function g: R → R defined by g(x) = x2 is not injective, because (for example) g(1) = 1 = g(−1).
However, if we define the function h: R+ → R by the same formula as g, but with the domain restricted to only the nonnegative real numbers, then the function h is injective.
This is because, given arbitrary nonnegative real numbers x and x', if x2 = x'2, then |x| = |x'|, so x = x'.
-  A function f: X → Y is injective if and only if X is the empty set or there exists a function g: Y → X such that g o f  equals the identity function on X.
 -  A function is bijective if and only if it is both injective and surjective.
 -  If g o f is injective, then f is injective.
 -  If f and g are both injective, then g o f is injective.
 -  f: X → Y is injective if and only if, given any functions g,h: W → X, whenever f o g = f o h, then g = h. In other words, injective functions are precisely the monomorphisms in the category of sets.
 -  If f: X → Y is injective and A is a subset of X, then f −1(f(A)) = A. Thus, A can be recovered from its image f(A).
 -  If f: X → Y is injective and A and B are both subsets of X, then f(A ∩ B) = f(A) ∩ f(B).
 -  Every function h: W → Y can be decomposed as h = f o g for a suitable injection f and surjection g. This decomposition is unique up to isomorphism, and f may be thought of as the inclusion function[?] of the range h(W) of h as a subset of the codomain Y of h.
 -  If f : X → Y is an injective function, then Y has at least as many elements as X, in the sense of cardinal numbers.
 
See also: Surjection, Bijection
 
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