Questions tagged [continuity]

Intuitively, a continuous function is one where small changes of input result in correspondingly small changes of output. Use this tag for questions involving this concept. As there are many mathematical formalizations of continuity, please also use an appropriate subject tag such as (real-analysis) or (general-topology)

Analytic Definition: Let $(X, d_X)$ and $(Y, d_Y)$ be metric spaces. A map $f : X \to Y$ is said to be continuous at $x_0$ if for every $\varepsilon > 0$, there is $\delta > 0$ such that $d_Y(f(x_0), f(x)) < \delta$ whenever $d_X(x_0, x) < \varepsilon$. A map $f : X \to Y$ is said to be continuous if it is continuous at $x_0$ for all $x_0 \in X$.

Topological Definition: Let $(X,\mathcal T_X)$ and $(Y, \mathcal T_Y)$ be topological spaces. A map $f : X \to Y$ is said to be continuous if $U \in \mathcal T_Y$ implies that $f^{-1}(U) \in \mathcal T_X$.

In the case of metric spaces, the metric induces a topology, and the two notions of continuity coincide. Note that multiple metrics can induce the same topology, and that not all topologies are metrizable (can be generated from some metric).

Continuity is a sufficient condition for the intermediate value theorem. It is also a necessary condition for the extreme value theorem, as well as differentiability.

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Help with continuity of integral function

Let $f\in L^1([0,1],\lambda)$ I'd like to show that $F(x)=\int_{[0,x]}|f|\, d\lambda$ is continuous. I'm thinking of showing it is Lipschitz, but I can't really find any upper bound for $f$. Or maybe I can say something like $|f(x)|\leq \|f\|_1$…
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Continuity of $x^2$ function

I am studying continuity and in the textbook I follow is given an example with function $x^2$ to be continuous at $x_0=3$. This is how it is explained in the textbook: Some arithmetic converts this to $$|x^2-9|= |x − 3| |x + 3| \,\,.$$ If we…
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continuity and not-continuous

I am currently working on continuity of functions and I just red that the composition of two not-continuous can be continous. Currently I can't imagine why this is the case and can someone give me an example please?
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Continuity points of a function

Let $f\colon\mathbb {Z}\to\mathbb{R}$ with $f(n) = \begin{cases} \frac{1}{n} & \text{ for } n\in \mathbb {Z}\setminus\{0\}\\ 0 & \text{ for } n = 0 .\end{cases}$ I have to find the continuity points of $f$ (the answer is $\mathbb {Z}$). I would have…
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Prove if $f(0)=0,f(1)=3,f(2)=7$ then exists $c \in \mathbb{R}$ so that $f'(c)=\pi$

Let $f$ be a continuously differentiable function which satisfy $f(0)=0,f(1)=3,f(2)=7$. I want to prove that there is a real number $c$ such that $f'(c)=\pi$. Applying the mean value theorem, the derivative is $3$ somewhere in $[0,1]$ and $4$…
user30523
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Oscillation of a continuous $f$

The original theorem is a as follows: THEOREM Let $f$ be continuous on $[a,b]$. Then for any $\epsilon>0$ there exists a finite partition of $[a,b]$ such that the oscillation of $f$ on each subinterval is smaller than $\epsilon$. The proof is as…
Pedro
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Is there any continuous function having local minima at c but is neither decreasing in (c-h,c) nor increasing in (c,c+h)?

I can find a discontinuous function having the above conditions..... f(x) =x for x lying betwen (0,1) and (1,2) and -10 at x=1 But can anyone help me in finding a continuous function satisfying the conditions....
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Why is the Heaviside function 1/2 at the origin?

When looking at the definition of the Heaviside function it states: $H(t) = \begin{cases} 0 &\text{if } t<0\\\frac{1}{2} &\text{if }t=0\\1 &\text{if } t>0. \end{cases}$ Where does the $\frac{1}{2}$ come from for $t=0$? Thanks in advance!
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Where is $f(x)$ continuous?

$f(x)$ is defined as: $$f(x) = \lim_{n\to\infty}\frac{x^{2n} - 1}{x^{2n} + 1}.$$ Where is $f(x)$ continuous? Could anyone tell me if my answer is correct and how to improve it? I use l'Hopital's rule and take successive derivatives. I get…
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Continuity of the Box-Cox transform at λ = 0: Why is it the log?

The Box-Cox power transform frequently used in statistical analysis takes the value (x^λ -1) /λ for λ not equal to zero, and ln(x) for λ=0. I would like to see a demonstration, that need not be a full formal proof, that this family of…
andrewH
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Checking if "continuous" when $x$ is 1 and reaches 1

I have $$f(x) = x \left| x - 1 \right|$$ Here my given value for $x$ is 1 And I need to test if the function is "continuous" when $x$ is $1$ and also when reaching $$ f(1)$$ $$ \lim\limits_{x \to 1} f(x)$$ So I plug in 1 to the equation to find out…
Blue Bug
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Prove that if $|f(x)| \leq x^2$, then the function is continuous and differentiable at $x=0$.

Let $f:\mathbb{R} \to \mathbb{R}$ be a function such that $|f(x)| \leq x^2$ . Prove whether or not the function is continuous and differentiable at $x=0$. Please tell me where am i wrong i have used the sandwich theorem : $-x^2 \leq f(x) \leq…
ABC123
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Where is the given function discontinuous?

Where is the given function discontinuous? $$f(x)= \begin{cases} x^2&\quad\text{if }x < -1\\ \sqrt{x + 4}&\quad\text{if }−1 ≤ x ≤ 0\\ \sin(2x)/x&\quad\text{if }x > 0\\ \end{cases}$$ I have checked discontinuity with $x=0$ (continuous), and…
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Continuity on a Set

Suppose f is continuous on a S $\subset$ R. Show that the set $$D = \{ x ∈S: f(x) = 0\} $$ is closed I'm having trouble proving this. I tried the epsilon-delta definition of continuity: Since, f is cont. on S, i then used the limit definition of…
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How to prove that the inverse of the given continuous function is not continuous

I have the following problem: Consider the identity map $id: C_{max} \rightarrow C_{int}$ where $C_{max}$ is the metric space $C([a,b],\mathbb{R})$ of continuous real valued function defined on $[a,b]$ equipped with the metric $d_{max}(f,g) =…