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  2. Continuous function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Continuous_function

    the sinc-function becomes a continuous function on all real numbers. The term removable singularity is used in such cases when (re)defining values of a function to coincide with the appropriate limits make a function continuous at specific points. A more involved construction of continuous functions is the function composition.

  3. Closed graph property - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Closed_graph_property

    Let X denote the real numbers ℝ with the usual Euclidean topology and let Y denote ℝ with the indiscrete topology (where note that Y is not Hausdorff and that every function valued in Y is continuous). Let f : X → Y be defined by f(0) = 1 and f(x) = 0 for all x ≠ 0. Then f : X → Y is continuous but its graph is not closed in X × Y. [4]

  4. Tietze extension theorem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tietze_extension_theorem

    Pavel Urysohn. In topology, the Tietze extension theorem (also known as the Tietze–Urysohn–Brouwer extension theorem or Urysohn-Brouwer lemma [1]) states that any real-valued, continuous function on a closed subset of a normal topological space can be extended to the entire space, preserving boundedness if necessary.

  5. Closed graph theorem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Closed_graph_theorem

    So, if the open mapping theorem holds for ; i.e., is an open mapping, then is continuous and then is continuous (as the composition of continuous maps). For example, the above argument applies if f {\displaystyle f} is a linear operator between Banach spaces with closed graph, or if f {\displaystyle f} is a map with closed graph between compact ...

  6. Pathological (mathematics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pathological_(mathematics)

    The sum of a differentiable function and the Weierstrass function is again continuous but nowhere differentiable; so there are at least as many such functions as differentiable functions. In fact, using the Baire category theorem, one can show that continuous functions are generically nowhere differentiable. [2]

  7. Brouwer fixed-point theorem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brouwer_fixed-point_theorem

    Every continuous function from a closed disk to itself has at least one fixed point. [6] This can be generalized to an arbitrary finite dimension: In Euclidean space Every continuous function from a closed ball of a Euclidean space into itself has a fixed point. [7] A slightly more general version is as follows: [8] Convex compact set

  8. Weierstrass function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weierstrass_function

    It turns out that the Weierstrass function is far from being an isolated example: although it is "pathological", it is also "typical" of continuous functions: In a topological sense: the set of nowhere-differentiable real-valued functions on [0, 1] is comeager in the vector space C ([0, 1]; R ) of all continuous real-valued functions on [0, 1 ...

  9. Uniform continuity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uniform_continuity

    The Heine–Cantor theorem asserts that every continuous function on a compact set is uniformly continuous. In particular, if a function is continuous on a closed bounded interval of the real line, it is uniformly continuous on that interval. The Darboux integrability of continuous functions follows almost immediately from this theorem.