To determine the number of non-differentiable points for the given function \( f(x) = \min\{x - \lfloor x \rfloor, 1 - x + \lfloor x \rfloor\} \) in the interval \((-2, 2)\), we first analyze the components. The function is defined as the minimum of two expressions:
We express \(f(x)\) as:
\(f(x) = \min(\{x\}, 1 - \{x\})\)
The function alternates between these two values based on \(\{x\}\). The critical points occur when \(\{x\} = 0.5\) because:
Differentiability can be compromised at transitions occurring at half-integers within the range. Therefore, we identify such points:
Examining \((-2, 2)\), the function is non-differentiable at points where fractional or integral parts change, as differentiability is affected at crucial transitions: Point list: \(-1\), \(-0.5\), \(-1.5\), \(0\), \(0.5\), \(1\), \(1.5\). Thus, there are 7 non-differentiable points in \((-2, 2)\).
Let \( \Omega \) be a non-empty open connected subset of \( \mathbb{C} \) and \( f: \Omega \to \mathbb{C} \) be a non-constant function. Let the functions \( f^2: \Omega \to \mathbb{C} \) and \( f^3: \Omega \to \mathbb{C} \) be defined by \[ f^2(z) = (f(z))^2 \quad {and} \quad f^3(z) = (f(z))^3, \quad z \in \Omega. \]
Consider the following two statements:
S1: If \( f \) is continuous in \( \Omega \) and \( f^2 \) is analytic in \( \Omega \), then \( f \) is analytic in \( \Omega \).
S2: If \( f^2 \) and \( f^3 \) are analytic in \( \Omega \), then \( f \) is analytic in \( \Omega \). Then, which one of the following is correct?
Let \( U = \{z \in \mathbb{C}: \operatorname{Im}(z) > 0\} \) and \( D = \{z \in \mathbb{C}: |z| < 1\} \), where \( \operatorname{Im}(z) \) denotes the imaginary part of \( z \).
Let \( S \) be the set of all bijective analytic functions \( f: U \to D \) such that \( f(i) = 0 \).
Then, the value of \( \sup_{f \in S} |f(4i)| \) is: