What Does C^3 Mean in Theorem 6.1?

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SUMMARY

The discussion centers on Theorem 6.1, which involves the centered formula of order O(h²) for functions f belonging to the class C³ on the interval [a, b]. It clarifies that f ∈ C³[a, b] indicates that f is three times continuously differentiable. The correct interpretation of the approximation f'(x) ≈ [f(x+h) - f(x-h)]/(2h) is emphasized, correcting a common misconception regarding the centered difference formula. The symbol "∈" is defined as "is an element of," which is crucial for understanding the context of the theorem.

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Homework Statement


(See attachment: if it doesn't work, see below for poorer formatting)[/B]
Theorem 6.1 (Centered Formula of Order O(h2)). Assume that f ∈ C^3[a, b] and that x − h, x, x + h ∈ [a, b]. Then (3) f (x) ≈ f (x + h) − f (x − h) 2h . Furthermore, there exists a number c = c(x) ∈ [a, b] such that (4) f (x) = f (x + h) − f (x − h) 2h + Etrunc( f, h), where Etrunc( f, h) = −h2 f (3) (c) 6 = O(h2).

Homework Equations


While reading Theroem 6.1, I have difficulty understanding (realms? "∈") in general, so I was wondering what is meant by C^3

The Attempt at a Solution

 

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irishetalon00 said:
realms? "∈"
This symbol, ∈, means "is an element of"
 
irishetalon00 said:

Homework Statement


(See attachment: if it doesn't work, see below for poorer formatting)[/B]
Theorem 6.1 (Centered Formula of Order O(h2)). Assume that f ∈ C^3[a, b] and that x − h, x, x + h ∈ [a, b]. Then (3) f (x) ≈ f (x + h) − f (x − h) 2h . Furthermore, there exists a number c = c(x) ∈ [a, b] such that (4) f (x) = f (x + h) − f (x − h) 2h + Etrunc( f, h), where Etrunc( f, h) = −h2 f (3) (c) 6 = O(h2).

Homework Equations


While reading Theroem 6.1, I have difficulty understanding (realms? "∈") in general, so I was wondering what is meant by C^3

The Attempt at a Solution


What you wrote makes no sense, and is almost always wrong. You wrote f (x) ≈ f (x + h) − f (x − h) 2h, which is generally false. What IS true is that f'(x) ≈ [f(x+h) - f(x-h)]/(2h) for small |h|. Parentheses are important!
 
Thank you for pointing me to relevant pages and explaining symbols.
 

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