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If you want the function version, look at dvmul. But the relation version is the core version, because it isn't good enough to know that the derivative equals x if you don't know the function is also differentiable at x. Plus the derivative is not unique in certain pathological cases so you can't actually recover the relation version from the function version with differentiability side conditions.
I agree that it's hard to understand. So ( S _D F ) is the derivative of F restricted to S ?
By the way, it's strange that in both versions, the product in the second summand is commuted. I mean: one has (fg)' = f'g + fg' (since \C is commutative, you can certainly write it as (fg)' = f'g + g'f, but it's weird).
On Thursday, January 9, 2020 at 12:07:11 PM UTC+1, Mario Carneiro wrote:If you want the function version, look at dvmul. But the relation version is the core version, because it isn't good enough to know that the derivative equals x if you don't know the function is also differentiable at x. Plus the derivative is not unique in certain pathological cases so you can't actually recover the relation version from the function version with differentiability side conditions.This worries me because I don't understand this at all... Is it possible that "the derivative of f at x equals A" (you wrote "equals x") yet the function is f not differentiable at x ? Is it a side effect of the coding in set.mm, which makes undefined expressions equal to (/) (so the above can happen only with A = (/) ) ?
Second, you write that the derivative is not unique ? Last time I checked, \C was Hausdorff. Or are you using a nonstandard definition for the derivative ?
we should have guarded the application to avoid seeing it in the first place.
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