Yunjia said:
The defition of uniformly continuous is perplexing for me. Is it possible for you to illustrate it with a proof about a function which is not uniformly continuous but continuous on a set so that I can compare the two? Thank you.
First note an important point about "uniform continuity" and "continuity" you may have overlooked: we define "continuous" at a
single point and then say that a function is "continuous on set A" if and only if it is continuous at every point on A. We define "uniformly continuous"
only on a set, not at a single points of a set.
A function is
uniformly continuous on any
closed set on which it is continuous and so on any set
contained in a closed set on which it is continuous.
To give an example of a function that is continuous but
not uniformly continuous, we need to look at f(x)= 1/x on the set (0, 1).
To show that it is continuous on (0, 1), let a be a point in (0, 1) and look at |f(x)- f(a)|= |1/x- 1/a|= |a/ax- x/ax|= |(a- x)/ax|= |x- a|/ax< \epsilon.
We need to find a number, \delta> 0 such that if |x- a|< \delta, then |f(x)- f(a)|> \epsilon. We already have |x- a| ax\epsilon so we need an
upper bound on ax. If we start by requiring that \delta< a/2 then |x- a|< \delta< a/2 so that -a/2< x- a< a/2or a/2&amp;lt; x&amp;lt; 3a/2 so an upper bound on ax is 3a^2/2. If |x- a|&amp;lt; a/2 <b>and</b> |x- a|&amp;lt; 3a/2 then |f(x)- f(a)|&amp;lt; |x- a|/ax&amp;lt; |x- a|/(3a^2/2)= 2|x- a|/3a^2 which will be less than \epsilon as long as |x- a|&amp;lt; 3a^2\epsilon/2<br />
<br />
So we can take \delta to be the <b>smaller</b> of a/2 and 3a^2/\epsilon. Therefore, 1/x is continuous at any point a in (0, 1) so continuous on (0, 1).<br />
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Now the point is that this \delta depends on a. It is a decreasing function of a and will go to 0 as a goes to 0. That&#039;s fine for &quot;<i>continuity</i>&quot; but for <i>uniform continuity</i> we must be able to use the <b>same</b> \delta&amp;gt; 0 for a given \epsilon no matter what the &quot;a&quot; is and we cannot do that. If the problem were to prove uniform continuity on the set [p, 1), which is contained in the closed set [p, 1], we could use, for any a in that set, the \delta that we get for a= p, the smallest x value in the set. But with (0, 1), the smallest \delta is 0 which we <b>cannot</b> use since we must have \delta&amp;gt; 0.