Gujarat BoardEnglish MediumSTD 12 ScienceMathsDifferentiability3 Marks
Question
Give an example of a function which is continuos but not differentiable at at a point.
✓
Answer
Consider a function, $\text{f(x)}=\begin{cases}\text{x}, & \text{x}> 0\\-\text{x}, & \text{x}\leq 0\end{cases}$
This mod function is continuous at x = 0 but not differentiable at x = 0.
Continuity at x - 0, We have:
(LHL at x = 0)
$\lim_\limits{\text{x}\rightarrow0^{-}}\text{f(x)}$
$=\lim_\limits{\text{x}\rightarrow0}\text{f}(0-\text{h})$
$=\lim_\limits{\text{x}\rightarrow0}-(0-\text{h})$
$=0$
(RHL at x = 0)
$\lim_\limits{\text{x}\rightarrow0^{+}}\text{f(x)}$
$=\lim_\limits{\text{x}\rightarrow0}\text{f}(0+\text{h})$
$=\lim_\limits{\text{x}\rightarrow0}(0+\text{h})$
$=0$
and f(0) = 0
Thus, $\lim_\limits{\text{x}\rightarrow0^{-}}\text{f(x)}=\lim_\limits{\text{x}\rightarrow0^{+}}\text{f(x)}=\text{f}(0).$
Hence, f(x) is continuous at x = 0.
Now, we will check the differentiability at x = 0, we have:
(LHL at x = 0)
$\lim_\limits{\text{x}\rightarrow0^{-}}\frac{\text{f(x)}-\text{f}(0)}{\text{x}-0}$
$=\lim_\limits{\text{h}\rightarrow0}\frac{\text{f}(0-\text{h})-\text{f}(0)}{0-\text{h}-0}$
$=\lim_\limits{\text{h}\rightarrow0}\frac{-(0-\text{h})-0}{-\text{h}}=-1$
(RHL at x = 0)
$\lim_\limits{\text{x}\rightarrow0^{+}}\frac{\text{f(x)}-\text{f}(0)}{\text{x}-0}$
$=\lim_\limits{\text{h}\rightarrow0}\frac{\text{f}(0+\text{h})-\text{f}(0)}{0+\text{h}-0}$
$=\lim_\limits{\text{h}\rightarrow0}\frac{(0+\text{h})-0}{-\text{h}}=1$
Thus, $\lim_\limits{\text{h}\rightarrow0^{-}}\text{f(x)}\neq\lim_\limits{\text{h}\rightarrow0^{+}}\text{f(x)}$
Hence f(x) is not differentiable at x = 0.
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