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
Feb 4, 2017

Refer to the Discussion given in the Explanation Section below.

Explanation:

Observe that #f# is not defined at #x=3#, and, hence is not

continuous at that point.

For #AA x in (3,oo) ={ x in RR : x>3};# by the defn. of Absolute Value Function,

#|x-3|=(x-3) rArr f(x)=|x-3|/(x-3)=(x-3)/(x-3)=1, x >3.#

#"Similarly, "AA x in (-oo,3), f(x)=(-(x-3))/(x-3)=-1, x<3.#

This means that #lim_(x to 3+) f(x)=1 != -1 = lim_(x to 3-) f(x).#

In other words, #lim_(x to 3) f(x)" does not exist."#

We conclude that #f" has non-removable discontinuity at "x=3.#

Feb 4, 2017

#f(x)# is continuous in #RR -{3}#, and the dicontinuity is not removable.

Explanation:

The function is discontinuous for #x=3# since the denominator is null.

Then we analyze separately:

  1. 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#

  2. 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, #f(x)# is continuous in #RR -{3}#

The discontinuity cannot be removed, as clearly:

#lim_(x->3^-) f(x) = -1#

#lim_(x->3^+) f(x) = 1#

As the limit from the right and from the left are different, then the function does not have a limit for #x->3#

This is the graph of #y=f(x)# which shows the discontinuity:
graph{(|x-3|)/(x-3) [-2, 5, -3, 3]}