johann1301
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Is the tangents function tan(x) continuous when x = 90 degrees or x = pi/2?
Correct. The domain of tan(x) doesn't include odd multiples of π/2.johann1301 said:because it isn't defined at that point?
HallsofIvy said:Do you not know the definition of "continuous" at a give point? It is
"A function, f, is continuous at x= a if and only if these three conditions are satisified:
1) f(a) exists (f is defined at x= a)
2) \lim_{x\to a} f(x) exists
3) \lim_{x\to a} f(x)= f(a)
Since (3) certainly implies that the left and right sides of the equation exist, often we just state (3) alone. But it is part of the definition of "continuous" that f is defined at x= a.
johann1301 said:Ok, this makes sense, but what about epsilon and delta argumentation? Is that another definition?
johann1301 said:Ok, this makes sense, but what about epsilon and delta argumentation? Is that another definition?
willem2 said:No. That's just used in the definition of a limit, which is used in the definition of a continuous function.
caveman1917 said:As it turns out wikipedia (see article on "continuous function") falls for such an issue, probably due to using several different textbooks by different authors together. The Weierstrass definition has |x-p| < \delta, the definition for a limit has 0 < |x-p| < \delta.
The difference is small but relevant, define f \subseteq \{ p \} \times \mathbb{R} = \{ (p, f(p)) \}. Then the limit at p doesn't exist yet f is continuous at p.
DrewD said:Unless I misunderstand what you are saying, this is not an error.
DrewD said:That's certainly correct. I wasn't paying enough attention. Thank you for pointing out my mistake.
The theorem could be stated as ##f:U\rightarrow\mathbb{R}## with ##U## open instead of referring directly to limit points (I think open sets would save the day).