A continuity is a continuous function that is predictable. It has no breaks, jumps, or holes. It can be drawn without lifting your pencil off the paper. In a continuous graph, the intended height of the graph is the actual height. The limit and the value are the same.
http://www.math10.com/en/algebra/functions/function-continuity/11.gif |
http://www.ops.org/high/north/Portals/0/ACADEMICS/StaffPages/holleyd/calculushtml01/calc1-4notes8.gif Point Discontinuity |
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/e/e6/Discontinuity_jump.eps.png Jump Discontinuity |
http://web.cs.du.edu/~rjudd/calculus/calc1/notes/dis6.png Oscillating Behavior |
http://dj1hlxw0wr920.cloudfront.net/userfiles/wyzfiles/44bad38c-431e-4382-8fe9-86303561b2a0.gif Infinite Discontinuity
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A limit is the intended height of a function. A limit exists when the left and right side meet. This is the reason on why a limit still exists at a point. Both sides intended to go there, so the L/R are the same number. As long as you reach the same height from the left and right, a limit exists. A limit does not exist when there are different L/R. When the limit does not exist, it is because of jumps, breaks, or holes. The value is thr actual height, while the limit is the intended height.
http://www.formyschoolstuff.com/school/math/glossary/images/JumpDiscontinuity.gif Limit does not exist because of a jump discontinuity; different L/R |
http://web.cs.du.edu/~rjudd/calculus/calc1/notes/dis4.png Limit does not exist because of unbounded behavior |
3. How do we evaluate limits numerically, graphically, and algebraically?
When evaluating a limit, there are 3 possible ways to do this: numerically, graphically, and algebraically. Evaluating a limit numerically means on a table. To do this, we must place the number that x is approaching in the center of the graph, then we must add/subtract .1 from this number. We can then use a calculator to find the f(x) values at these x-values. The table helps us determine the x and f(x), the intended and actual height of the function. An example can be seen below.
http://i1.ytimg.com/vi/uTyYPfwVEGo/maxresdefault.jpg |
http://s3.amazonaws.com/KA-youtube-converted/XIsPC-f2e2c.mp4/XIsPC-f2e2c.png |
http://www.drcruzan.com/Images/Mathematics/Limits/Example_SumAndPowerLimit.png Direct Substitution |
http://www.drcruzan.com/Images/Mathematics/Limits/Example_RationalLimit_02.png Dividing out/Factoring |
http://dq1ouwfo9m6uw.cloudfront.net/datastreams/f-d%3A703a064c524d17a02ea802a0e5079348%2BEQUATION%2BEQUATION.1 Rationalizing/conjugate |