We know that to prove a transformation is linear we need to show that
$$T(x_1, y_1)+T(x_2, y_2)=T(x_1+x_2, y_1+y_2)$$
And
$$ kT(x,y) = T(kx, ky)$$
But I can’t think of a transformation which satisfies the first condition but not the second one? Does anyone know one example of this??
It is well known that there are maps $f:\mathbb R \to \mathbb R$ such that $f(x+y)=f(x)+f(y)$ but $f$ is not of the form $cx$ where $c$ is a constant. Such a map cannot satisfy the equation $f(kx)=kf(x)$ and $T(x,y)=(f(x),f(y))$ gives a map with the required properties.