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  2. Piecewise function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piecewise_function

    In applied mathematical analysis, "piecewise-regular" functions have been found to be consistent with many models of the human visual system, where images are perceived at a first stage as consisting of smooth regions separated by edges (as in a cartoon); [9] a cartoon-like function is a C 2 function, smooth except for the existence of ...

  3. Piecewise property - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piecewise_property

    A function property holds piecewise for a function, if the function can be piecewise-defined in a way that the property holds for every subdomain. Examples of functions with such piecewise properties are: Piecewise constant function, also known as a step function; Piecewise linear function; Piecewise continuous function

  4. Piecewise linear function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piecewise_linear_function

    A piecewise linear function is a function defined on a (possibly unbounded) interval of real numbers, such that there is a collection of intervals on each of which the function is an affine function. (Thus "piecewise linear" is actually defined to mean "piecewise affine ".)

  5. Sign function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sign_function

    The signum function of a real number is a piecewise function which is defined as follows: [1] ⁡:= {<, =, > The law of trichotomy states that every real number must be positive, negative or zero. The signum function denotes which unique category a number falls into by mapping it to one of the values −1 , +1 or 0, which can then be used in ...

  6. Analytic function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Analytic_function

    Piecewise defined functions (functions given by different formulae in different regions) are typically not analytic where the pieces meet. The complex conjugate function z → z * is not complex analytic, although its restriction to the real line is the identity function and therefore real analytic, and it is real analytic as a function from R ...

  7. Lower envelope - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lower_envelope

    For an infinite set of functions, the same notions may be defined using the infimum in place of the minimum, and the supremum in place of the maximum. [ 1 ] For continuous functions from a given class, the lower or upper envelope is a piecewise function whose pieces are from the same class.

  8. Piecewise-constant valuation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piecewise-constant_valuation

    A valuation V is called piecewise-constant, if the corresponding value-density function v is a piecewise-constant function. In other words: there is a partition of the resource C into finitely many regions, C 1 ,..., C k , such that for each j in 1,..., k , the function v inside C j equals some constant U j .

  9. Pasting lemma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pasting_lemma

    The lemma is implicit in the use of piecewise functions. For example, in the book Topology and Groupoids , where the condition given for the statement below is that A ∖ B ⊆ Int ⁡ A {\displaystyle A\setminus B\subseteq \operatorname {Int} A} and B ∖ A ⊆ Int ⁡ B . {\displaystyle B\setminus A\subseteq \operatorname {Int} B.}