What is the difference between differentiability and continuity of a

Bryant Jacobs

Bryant Jacobs

Answered question

2022-04-18

What is the difference between differentiability and continuity of a function?

Answer & Explanation

awalkbyfaithbzu6

awalkbyfaithbzu6

Beginner2022-04-19Added 21 answers

A function f(x) is continuous in the point x0 if the limit:
limxx0f(x)
exists, is finite, and has value equal to the function:
f(x0)=limxx0f(x)
A function f(x) is differentiable in the point x0 if the limit:
f(x0)=limxx0f(x)f(x0)xx0
exists and is finite.
Any continuous function is a differentiable function.
We can prove it by writing f(x) as:
f(x)=f(x0)+f(x)f(x0)xx0(xx0)
Passing to the limit for x x0:
limxx0f(x)=f(x0)+limxx0(f(x)f(x0)xx0)limxx0(xx0)
limxx0f(x)=f(x0)+f(x0)0=f(x0)
Continous but not differentiable functions include, for instance:
y=|x|
is continuous but not differentiable in x=0.

libertydragonrbha

libertydragonrbha

Beginner2022-04-20Added 15 answers

If a function is differentiable, then every point on its graph exhibits a slope. ... The absolute value of x function is a continuous function because it doesn't break up, which is a requirement for a function to be continuous.

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