There are plenty of examples of differentiable functions $\Bbb R\to\Bbb R$ with derivatives that are not everywhere continuous. However, as stated here, it is impossible for the derivative to be nowhere continuous. In general, can anything be said about exactly how "ugly" a derivative can get?
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analysis - Injection, making bijection
I have injection $f \colon A \rightarrow B$ and I want to get bijection. Can I just resting codomain to $f(A)$? I know that every function i...
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I need to give an explicit bijection between $(0, 1]$ and $[0,1]$ and I'm wondering if my bijection/proof is correct. Using the hint tha...
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So if I have a matrix and I put it into RREF and keep track of the row operations, I can then write it as a product of elementary matrices. ...
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Recently I took a test where I was given these two limits to evaluate: $\lim_\limits{h \to 0}\frac{\sin(x+h)-\sin{(x)}}{h}$ and $\lim_\limi...
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