Real valued continuous functions
Suppose we have a function that maps real numbers to real numbers and is defined on some interval, like the three functions h, T and M from above. Such a function can be represented by a graph in the cartesian plane; the function is continuous if, roughly speaking, the graph is a single unbroken curve with no "holes" or "jumps": if it can be drawn by hand without lifting the pencil from the paper.
To be more precise, we say that the function f is continuous at some point c if the following three requirements are satisfied:
- f(c) must be defined (i.e. c must be an element of the domain of f)
- The limit of f(x), as x approaches c, must exist
- The limit of f(x), as x approaches c, must equal f(c)
We call the function everywhere continuous, or simply continuous, if it is continuous at every point of its