
What is a continuous extension? - Mathematics Stack Exchange
The continuous extension of f(x) f (x) at x = c x = c makes the function continuous at that point. Can you elaborate some more? I wasn't able to find very much on "continuous extension" throughout the web. …
Difference between continuity and uniform continuity
Jan 27, 2014 · To understand the difference between continuity and uniform continuity, it is useful to think of a particular example of a function that's continuous on R R but not uniformly continuous on R R.
probability theory - Why does a C.D.F need to be right-continuous ...
May 10, 2019 · This function is always right-continuous. That is, for each x ∈ Rk x ∈ R k we have lima↓xFX(a) =FX(x) lim a ↓ x F X (a) = F X (x). My question is: Why is this property important? Is …
What's the difference between continuous and piecewise continuous ...
Oct 15, 2016 · A continuous function is a function where the limit exists everywhere, and the function at those points is defined to be the same as the limit. I was looking at the image of a piecewise continuous
Discrete vs Continuous vs Random Variables - Mathematics Stack …
Dec 28, 2015 · A continuous random variable is a random variable with a continuous cumulative distribution function F F. Typically the range of a continuous random variable is R R, [0, ∞) [0, ∞), or …
is bounded linear operator necessarily continuous?
In general, is a bounded linear operator necessarily continuous (I guess the answer is no, but what would be a counter example?) Are things in Banach spaces always continuous?
Continuity and Joint Continuity - Mathematics Stack Exchange
Jan 13, 2012 · the difference is in definitions, so you may want to find an example what the function is continuous in each argument but not jointly
The definition of continuously differentiable functions
Jan 24, 2015 · A continuously differentiable function f(x) f (x) is a function whose derivative function [Math Processing Error] f (x) is also continuous at the point in question.
Prove that $\\sqrt{x}$ is continuous on its domain $[0, \\infty).$
As you have it written now, you still have to show x−−√ x is continuous on [0, a) [0, a), but you are on the right track. As @user40615 alludes to above, showing the function is continuous at each point in the …
Proof that the continuous image of a compact set is compact
I know that the image of a continuous function is bounded, but I'm having trouble when it comes to prove this for vectorial functions. If somebody could help me with a step-to-step proof, that would be great.