I am looking at finding the range of the f(x)= x+1/x
One obvious way is to use calculus:
f'(x) = 1-1/x^2 , find the turning points and we get the range is f(x)>=2 or f(x)<=-2
Does the following alternative method make sense?
x+1/x to be rewritten as (sqrt(x)- i/sqrt(x) )^2 +2 , a sort of completing the square?
And whilst this gives one bit of the range ( defined only for x>0) how do I argue for the other bit?
				
			One obvious way is to use calculus:
f'(x) = 1-1/x^2 , find the turning points and we get the range is f(x)>=2 or f(x)<=-2
Does the following alternative method make sense?
x+1/x to be rewritten as (sqrt(x)- i/sqrt(x) )^2 +2 , a sort of completing the square?
And whilst this gives one bit of the range ( defined only for x>0) how do I argue for the other bit?