By Rick Stoll |
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In one of our previous pages, we have seen that if f'(x0)
exists, then for x close to x0, we have
![]() This is the "linear approximation" done via the tangent line. Obviously this implies
![]() which means that f(x) is continuous at x0. Thus there is a link between continuity and differentiability: If a function is differentiable at a point, it is also continuous there. Consequently, there is no need to investigate for differentiability at a point, if the function fails to be continuous at that point. Note that a function may be continuous but not differentiable, the absolute value function at x0=0 is the archetypical example. This relationship between differentiability and continuity is local. But a
global property also holds. Indeed, let f(x) be a differentiable
function on an interval I. Assume that f'(x) is bounded on I,
that is there exists M >0 such that
![]() The Mean Value Theorem will then imply that
![]() for any ![]() Nevertheless, a function may be uniformly continuous without having a bounded
derivative. For example,
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