Basic Calculus Module Week 2
Basic Calculus Module Week 2
you to understand the concept and know how to determine whether a function is
continuous or not.
When you finish this module, you will be able to:
1. Illustrate the continuity of a function at a number and an interval. (STEM_BC1)
2. Determine whether a function is continuous at a number or not. (STEM_BC2)
3. Solve problems involving continuity of a function.
One of the main reasons why this module was created is to ensure that it will assist
you to understand the concept and know how to determine whether a function is
continuous or not.
When you finish this module, you will be able to:
1. Illustrate the continuity of a function at a number and an interval. (STEM_BC1)
2. Determine whether a function is continuous at a number or not. (STEM_BC2)
3. Solve problems involving continuity of a function.
Basic Calculus
Lesson 2: Continuity of a Function
Continuous Function
At the basic level, teachers tend to describe continuous functions as those whose
graphs can be traced without lifting your pencil. While it is generally true that continuous
functions have such graphs, this is not a very precise or practical way to define
continuity. Many graphs and functions are continuous, or connected, in some places,
and discontinuous, or broken, in other places. There are even functions containing too
many variables to be graphed by hand. Therefore, it's necessary to have a more precise
definition of continuity, one that doesn't rely on our ability to graph and trace a function.
The limit of a function as x approaches a real number a from the right is written like this:
If the left limit and the right limit exist (are not infinity) and are equal, then we say the
limit of the function as x approaches a exists and is equal to the one-sided limits. We
write it like this:
What Is Continuity?
In calculus, a function is continuous at x = a if - and only if - all three of the following
conditions are met:
Both infinite and jump discontinuities fail condition #2 (limit does not exist), but how
they fail is different. Recall for a limit to exist, the left and right limits must exist (be finite)
and be equal. Infinite discontinuities have infinite left and right limits. Jump
discontinuities have finite left and right limits that are not equal.
Example 1
Is f(x) continuous at x = 0?
Example 3