Raginsheep
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- 2005
Do relations count as being continuous? So if i had x^2+y^2=4, is it continuous?
? Oh... yea, that's the defition of differentiability... that, plus the point that f'(a) exists... you need both things to exist for the graph to be differentiable...? I'm lost... maybe I should just stop talkingRaginsheep said:yeah.....its just that aud said that you can differentiate if the graph is continuous.
u really luv ur zeroes.gordo said:ah ok
i did my history extn project on zero too
beleive me, you will never do dividing by zero
Maths 2/3U SyllabusRaginsheep said:Hey I said I couldn't do it and Im sure its not in the 3u course anywayz.
that means in any mathsArchman said:na 1/0 is not anything, not in maths i know anyway.
dy/dx=± x/√(4-x<sup>2</sup>)Slide Rule said:I would add that since y=+sqrt(4-x^2),
dy/dx= +sqrt(4-x^2)/x
aparently the arabs were the first to define "zero" and before that time it was very puzzling to define 'nothing'.mr EaZy said:u really luv ur zeroes.
But Where did the Zero come from anyway?
I don't think anyone has corrected this.. but, absolute value is continuous!Slide Rule said:f(x)=|x|/x is not continuous because you can't divide by zero, and absolute vale functions are not continuous.
So the two functions it is composed of a discontinuous:
y=|x|
w=1/x
f(x) is just y.w
But.. how can someone be expected to know that the two reasons are these two... well he can guess.. trying to make up two reasons because the Q asks for 2Xayma said:It isn't continuous as
Because it changes from 1 for x>0 to -1, x<0.
aud said:Found something in my Year 11 notes...
test for differentiability at a point
1. test for continuity
2. check .....blah
Then I have the graph y = |x|
A proof of continuity
A 'therefore, continuous at x = 0'
A proof (or disproof) of differentiability
A 'therefore, not differentiable'
So y=|x| is continuous at x=0... oops
u thought wrongmojako said:I don't think anyone has corrected this.. but, absolute value is continuous!
haha thanks ngaingai said:u thought wrong
sqrtxmojako said:I cant think of any normal function which naturally has a finite domain...
sqrt(x) has vertical tangent x=0ngai said:sqrtx
logx