A function of \(x\) is called continuous if a small change in \(x\) only causes a small change in the function’s value, not a sudden jump.
It can be roughly described as a function which can be drawn “without taking one’s pencil off the paper”.
A function of \(x\) is called continuous if a small change in \(x\) only causes a small change in the function’s value, not a sudden jump.
It can be roughly described as a function which can be drawn “without taking one’s pencil off the paper”.