Higher differentiability over ℝ
or ℂ
#
Results over ℝ
or ℂ
#
The results in this section rely on the Mean Value Theorem, and therefore hold only over ℝ
(and
its extension fields such as ℂ
).
If a function has a Taylor series at order at least 1, then at points in the interior of the
domain of definition, the term of order 1 of this series is a strict derivative of f
.
If a function is C^n
with 1 ≤ n
around a point, and its derivative at that point is given to
us as f'
, then f'
is also a strict derivative.
If a function is C^n
with 1 ≤ n
around a point, and its derivative at that point is given to
us as f'
, then f'
is also a strict derivative.
If a function is C^n
with 1 ≤ n
around a point, then the derivative of f
at this point
is also a strict derivative.
If a function is C^n
with 1 ≤ n
around a point, then the derivative of f
at this point
is also a strict derivative.
If a function is C^n
with 1 ≤ n
, then the derivative of f
is also a strict derivative.
If a function is C^n
with 1 ≤ n
, then the derivative of f
is also a strict derivative.
If f
has a formal Taylor series p
up to order 1
on {x} ∪ s
, where s
is a convex set,
and ‖p x 1‖₊ < K
, then f
is K
-Lipschitz in a neighborhood of x
within s
.
If f
has a formal Taylor series p
up to order 1
on {x} ∪ s
, where s
is a convex set,
then f
is Lipschitz in a neighborhood of x
within s
.
If f
is C^1
within a convex set s
at x
, then it is Lipschitz on a neighborhood of x
within s
.
If f
is C^1
at x
and K > ‖fderiv 𝕂 f x‖
, then f
is K
-Lipschitz in a neighborhood of
x
.
If f
is C^1
at x
, then f
is Lipschitz in a neighborhood of x
.
If f
is C^1
, it is locally Lipschitz.
A C^1
function with compact support is Lipschitz.