Tutorial 2
Tutorial 2
f 0 (a) = lim
where f 0 (a) is how we denote the derivative of f at the point a. We know this to
be the slope of the tangent line to the curve y = f (x) at the point (a, f (a)).
The Derivative as a function:
This notion is very similar to the definition described above. Only now, we allow the
point a to vary (or change). As in everything else in math, when we have a quantity
that can vary, we label it x. So, replacing a with the variable x, we get
f 0 (x) = lim
h0
f (x + h) f (x)
.
h
For any x where this limit exists, we associate the number x to the number f 0 (x).
So now, suppose we let D be the set
f (x + h) f (x)
D = x R : lim
exists
h0
h
(the set of all x where the limit above exists), then we can say f 0 : D R. That is,
f 0 associates all numbers in a domain D to numbers in R. This is what a function
does! So we can regard f 0 as a function of x.