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1 4 Continuous Functions

A function is continuous if its graph can be drawn without lifting your pen from the paper. A function is discontinuous if it has holes, jumps, or vertical asymptotes in its graph. A function's domain, which are the inputs, can determine if it is continuous or not. For a function to be continuous, its limit must equal its value as the input approaches a number in its domain from both sides.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
9K views

1 4 Continuous Functions

A function is continuous if its graph can be drawn without lifting your pen from the paper. A function is discontinuous if it has holes, jumps, or vertical asymptotes in its graph. A function's domain, which are the inputs, can determine if it is continuous or not. For a function to be continuous, its limit must equal its value as the input approaches a number in its domain from both sides.

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Continuous Functions

A function is continuous when its graph is a single unbroken curve ...

... that you could draw without lifting your pen from the paper.
That is not a formal definition, but it helps you understand the idea.
Here is a continuous function:

Examples
So what is not continuous (also called discontinuous) ?
Look out for holes, jumps or vertical asymptotes (where the function heads up/down
towards infinity).

Not Continuous

Not Continuous

Not Continuous

(hole)

(jump)

(vertical asymptote)

Domain

A function has a Domain.


In its simplest form the domain is all the
values that go into a function.

A function might be continuous or not, depending on its Domain!


Example: 1/(x-1)
At x=1 we have:

1/(1-1) = 1/0 = undefined


So there is a "discontinuity" at x=1

f(x) = 1/(x-1)
over all Real Numbers

g(x) = 1/(x-1) for x>1

NOT continuous

Continuous

g(x) does not include the value x=1, so it is continuous.


So when a function is continuous within its Domain, it is a continuous function.

More Formally !
We can define continuous using Limits (it helps to read that page first):

A function f is continuous when, for every value c in its Domain:


f(c) is defined, and:

"the limit of f(x) as x approaches c equals f(c)"


The limit says:

"as x gets closer and closer to c


then f(x) gets closer and closer to f(c)"
And we have to check from both directions:

as x approaches c (from left)


then f(x) approaches f(c)

AND
as x approaches c (from right)
then f(x) approaches f(c)

If we get different values from left and right (a "jump"), then the limit does not exist!

How to Use:
Make sure that, for all x values:

f(x) is defined

and the limit at x equals f(x)

Here are some examples:

Example: f(x) = (x2-1)/(x-1) for all Real Numbers


The function is undefined when x=1:
(x2-1)/(x-1) = (12-1)/(1-1) = 0/0
So it is not a continuous function

Let us change the domain:

Example: g(x) = (x2-1)/(x-1) over the interval x<1


Almost the same function, but now it is over an interval that does not include x=1.

So now it is a continuous function (does not include the "hole")

Example: How about this piecewise function:

which looks like:

It is defined at x=1, because h(1)=2 (no "hole")


But at x=1 you can't say what the limit is, because there are two competing answers:

"2" from the left, and

"1" from the right

so in fact the limit does not exist at x=1 (there is a "jump")


And so the function is not continuous.
But:

Example: How about the piecewise function absolute value:

which looks
like:

At x=0 it has a very pointy change!

But it is still defined at x=0, because f(0)=0 (so no "hole"),


And the limit as you approach x=0 (from either side) is also 0 (so no "jump"),
So it is in fact continuous.
(But it is not differentiable.)

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