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Continuous function

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A diagram showing a Lipschitz continuous function with a double cone to illustrate the concept.

In mathematics, a continuous function is a function where small changes in the input only cause small changes in the output. This means the function's value does not jump or change suddenly. There are no sudden changes, called discontinuities, in a continuous function.

Until the 19th century, mathematicians used simple ideas about continuity. Later, they created a more exact way to define continuity using the epsilon–delta definition of a limit.

Continuity is very important in calculus and mathematical analysis, where inputs and outputs are real or complex numbers. The idea of continuity has also been used in many types of functions, which helps build the field of topology.

For example, the height of a growing flower over time can be modeled by a continuous function. But the amount of money in a bank account changes suddenly when money is added or taken out, so it is a discontinuous function.

History

The idea of a continuous function was first described by Bernard Bolzano in 1817. Later, Augustin-Louis Cauchy explained it by saying that small changes in the input of a function should only cause small changes in the output. In the 1830s, Bolzano and Karl Weierstrass worked on a more exact way to describe continuity. Different mathematicians, including Édouard Goursat and Camille Jordan, suggested different rules for what makes a function continuous. Eduard Heine gave the first published explanation of uniform continuity in 1872, using ideas from Peter Gustav Lejeune Dirichlet.

Real functions

A real function works with real numbers and can be shown as a line on a graph. This function is continuous if the line does not have any sudden jumps or breaks.

We check for continuity by looking at small changes in the input. If these small changes cause small changes in the output, the function is continuous. This means there are no sudden jumps in the values of the function.

Related notions

A continuous function is a function where small changes in the input cause small changes in the output. There are different ways this idea is used in math.

One idea is called a continuous extension. This is when a function works on part of a bigger set, and we can expand it to work on the whole set while still being continuous.

In other areas of math, like order theory or category theory, the idea of continuity is used in different but related ways.

There are also special types of continuity, like approximate continuity, used in measure theory. This is when a function is continuous almost everywhere, meaning it is continuous except for a very small set of points.

Main article: Tietze extension theorem Main article: Hahn–Banach theorem Main article: Hausdorff space Main article: dense subset Main article: Blumberg theorem Main article: order theory Main article: partially ordered sets Main article: directed subset Main article: supremum Main article: Scott topology Main article: category theory Main article: functor Main article: categories Main article: limits Main article: class Main article: diagram Main article: objects Main article: quantales Main article: domains Main article: measure theory Main article: Lebesgue measurable set Main article: approximately continuous Main article: approximate limit Main article: Stepanov-Denjoy theorem

Images

Animation showing how continuous lines come together to form a discontinuous function in mathematics.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Continuous function, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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