Differentiable
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A real function is said to be differentiable at a point
if
is defined in an open neighborhood of
and all partial derivatives of
exist at
. In particular, for a function
defined on some subset
of
taking values in
,
is differentiable at
if and only if
contains an open interval containing
and the derivative of
exists at
.
A function can fail to be differentiable at the point
for the following reasons:
is not defined at
, i.e.
doesn't exist.
is not defined on some set of points that includes members arbitrarily close to
.
- The derivative
is not defined at
. Note that this requires at the very least that
, i.e. any function differentiable at a point
must also be continuous at that point.