In my school book there's an exercise:
We have three matrices $A \in \mathbb{R}^{m \times n}$ and $C, D \in \mathbb{R}^{n \times m}$.
If $CA = I$ and $AD = I$ than we can say that $C = D$.
Proof this.
Hint: work with the product $C\cdot A\cdot D$.
I ignored the hint and I tried to prove it. This is what I got:
\begin{align*} CA = I &\wedge AD = I\\ &\Updownarrow\\ C = A^{-1} &\wedge D = A^{-1}\\ &\Updownarrow \text{ The inverse of a regular matrix is unique}\\ C &= A \end{align*} EDIT: I just saw this proof is wrong, because were not working with square matrices.
Now I've got two questions.
- Is my own proof correct? I guess not
- How would you prove it by working with the product $C\cdot A\cdot D$?