Can a point of discontinuity have a tangent line?

1 Answer
Mar 17, 2016

No. Never, in fact, unless you live in some strange universe where mathematics itself ceases to exist.

Explanation:

When we talk about tangent lines, we usually assume that the point we're finding the tangent line of is continuous. If it's not, #f(x)# does not exist on that point and neither does #f'(x)# (if you haven't learned derivatives yet, it's fine - just know for now that #f'(x)# is the slope of the tangent line). For example, because #f(x)=1/x# is not continuous at #x=0#, the tangent line to #f(x)# does not exist at #x=0#. It would essentially be a straight line, but because the slope of a straight line is undefined, so would the line itself.

Of course, there's a strict mathematical definition/proof to show that discontinuities don't have tangent lines, but I'm not a big fan of those things - they tend to interfere with your understanding of concepts, especially at the introductory level. So for now, all you need to know is that because #f(x)# is not defined at discontinuities, neither is the tangent line at #x#. You simply can't draw tangent lines at these points.