
- What is a continuous extension? - Mathematics Stack Exchange- To find examples and explanations on the internet at the elementary calculus level, try googling the phrase "continuous extension" (or variations of it, such as "extension by continuity") … 
- What's the difference between continuous and piecewise …- 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 … 
- 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 $\mathbb R$ but not … 
- Proof of Continuous compounding formula - Mathematics Stack …- Following is the formula to calculate continuous compounding A = P e^(RT) Continuous Compound Interest Formula where, P = principal amount (initial investment) r = annual interest … 
- calculus - A function is said to be continuous. Can it still have ...- Aug 15, 2016 · This is a general question. A function is said to be continuous. Can it still have vertical asymptotes? Looking at the definition of continuity, I would say no. Because near a … 
- is bounded linear operator necessarily continuous?- 3 This property is unrelated to the completeness of the domain or range, but instead only to the linear nature of the operator. Yes, a linear operator (between normed spaces) is bounded if … 
- Continuous maps in topology; the definition? - Mathematics Stack …- May 6, 2016 · A constant function is continuous, but for most topologies does not map an open set to an open set. For a familiar somewhat different example, the image of $ (0,42)$ under … 
- Continuous from the left/right - Mathematics Stack Exchange- Apr 27, 2021 · Continuous from the left/right Ask Question Asked 4 years, 6 months ago Modified 4 years, 6 months ago 
- The definition of continuously differentiable functions- Jan 24, 2015 · Note the ending "-ly", which makes it an adverb, not an adjective. So "continuously differentiable" means "differentiable in a continuous way". 
- calculus - Are functions considered continuous at endpoints ...- In either case, a function is continuous on its domain if it is continuous at every point in the domain. Thus a function can be continuous on either $ [a,b]$ or $ (a,b)$.