~Continuity & Differentiability~

lim
f(x) = f(a)
x→a
~for this limit to hold, 3 conditions must be true:
i) f(a) must be defined
ii) lim f(x) must exist
x→a
iii) i) = ii)
~these are know as the "3 i's of continuity"
iii) is a necessary & sufficient condition for continuity & some only give
that limit alone, however, to see clearly the types of
discontinuity a function might have, one should also look at i) &
ii) separately.
~Different types of discontinuities~
1) i) does not hold but ii) does: gives a point (removable) discontinuity
3) ii) doesn't hold (but the function does not approach +
or
- infinity as x approaches a): gives a jump
discontinuity
(regardless if (i) holds or not).
In
this case, the right and left side limits are not the same.
ii) doesn't hold ( the function approaches + or - infinity):
gives an infinity discontinuity (regardless if (i) holds
or
not). In this case, the graph of f has a vertical asymptote.
~The following is the basic definition for a function to be differentiable at x=a.
~ f will be differentiable at a if and only if the following limit holds:
~this is the definition of f ' (a)
~think of being differentiable as being SMOOTH. A point moving on a smooth curve will not encounter any cusps (abrupt changes in slope or vertical tangents)
~for implicitly defined functions, it is possible for the curve to be
smooth at a point & have a vertical tangent line there.
(a circle at the end points of a horizontal diameter segment)
~the tangent lines must approach one tangent line at that point having
one slope value. If the slopes approach different values from each side
of a, a cusp is formed and the function will not be differentiable
there.
(not smooth at that point)
~It is possible for the tangent lines to approach one tangent line from
both sides and still not have a derivative there. This happens when the
cusp contains a vertical tangent line.
~The relationship between continuity & differentiability
~if you have a discontinuity at a point, you cannot be differentiable there.
~if you are differentiable at a point, you will be continuous at that point.
(if you are smooth there, then you will be connected there)
~if you are
continuous at a point, you may or may not be differentiable there.
Connected smoothly gives a derivative, (implicitly defined functions
are an exception, but connected with a cusp, does not).