How do you find the x values at which #f(x)=abs(x-3)/(x-3)# is not continuous, which of the discontinuities are removable?
2 Answers
Refer to the Discussion given in the Explanation Section below.
Explanation:
Observe that
continuous at that point.
For
This means that
In other words,
We conclude that
Explanation:
The function is discontinuous for
Then we analyze separately:
-
For
#x in (3,+oo)# , we have:
#(x-3) > 0 => abs(x-3)= (x-3) => f(x) = abs(x-3)/(x-3)= (x-3)/(x-3) = 1# -
For
#x in (-oo,3)# , we have:
#(x-3) < 0 => abs(x-3)= -(x-3) => f(x) = abs(x-3)/(x-3)= -(x-3)/(x-3) = -1#
Thus,
The discontinuity cannot be removed, as clearly:
As the limit from the right and from the left are different, then the function does not have a limit for
This is the graph of
graph{(|x-3|)/(x-3) [-2, 5, -3, 3]}