|  Real and Complex Analysis | 
In General > s.a. Calculus; functional analysis;
  operator theory; integration; series;
  vector calculus.
  * Idea: Real/complex analysis
    is the mathematical theory of functions of a real/complex variable.
  @ General books: Choquet 69;
    Pólya & Szegő 72;
    Gleason 66/91;
    Wong 10 [applied].
  @ Real analysis, II: Pons 14 [II];
    Laczkovich & Sós 15;
    Jacob & Evans 15;
    Conway 17.
  @ Real analysis, advanced: Bourbaki 58;
    Royden 63;
    Knapp 05 [2 vol, basic + advanced];
    Trench 03 (updated 12).
  @ Complex analysis: Bochner & Martin 48;
    Ahlfors 53;
    Pólya & Latta 74;
    Priestley 03;
    Sasane & Sasane 13 [friendly];
    Chakraborty et al 16;
    Marshall 19.
  @ Non-linear analysis: Rassias 86
      [fixed point and bifurcation theory, non-linear operators].
  @ Related topics: Rockafellar 68 [convex];
    Sirovich 71,
    de Bruijn 81 [asymptotic];
    Klebaner 12 [stochastic calculus];
    > s.a. Cauchy Theorem; Cauchy-Riemann;
    Convex Functions.
  > Online resources:
    see Wikipedia page.
  > Related topics: see connection;
    Covariant, Fréchet,
    and Weak Derivative; differential equations;
    integral equations.
"Less Than Continuous" Functions
  > s.a. distributions; path integrals ["jaggedness"
  of paths]; Semicontinuity; Derivative [subdifferential].
  * Types: The worst case is when a
    function does not have a limit along some or all directions at a point p.
  * Direction-dependent limit:
    The limit of a function f along any curve γ passing through
    p exists and depends only on the tangent vector v to γ
    at p; We call this limit \(\cal F\)(v).
  * Regular direction-dependent limit:
    The direction-dependent limit \(\cal F\)(v) of the function f admits
    derivatives to all orders with respect to v, and the operation of taking the
    limit of f along γ commutes with taking these derivatives.
  *  Itô calculus:
    A generalized form of calculus that can be applied to non-differentiable functions,
    and is one of the branches of stochastic calculus; Applications: It can be used
    to derive the general form of the Fokker-Planck equation; > s.a. Wikipedia
    page.
Continuity Classes of Functions > s.a. Hölder
  and Lipschitz condition.
  * Types: A map f
    : X → Y between two differentiable manifolds can be
  - C0: f is continuous.
  - C>0: f is
    C0 and its derivatives have regular direction-dependent limits.
  - C1/2:
    Δf/(Δx)1/2 approaches
    a finite limit as Δx → 0.
  - C1−:
    f satisfies the Lipschitz condition.
  * Conditions involving derivatives:
  - Cr,
    for some integer r: f is continuously differentiable up to the
    r-th order derivatives.
  - Cr0:
    f is Cr and has compact support.
  - Cr−:
    f is Cr−1 and its (r−1)-th
    derivatives are locally Lipschitz functions.
  - C>r:
    f is Cr and its (r+1)-th derivatives
    have regular direction-dependent limits.
  - C∞: f is infinitely differentiable.
  - Cω: f is analytic.
  * Remark: An example
    of a function which is C∞ but
    not Cω at x = 0
    is f(x) = e−1/x;
    C∞ submanifolds of a manifold can
    merge, Cω ones can't.
Special Types and Generalizations > s.a. functions;
  Expansion of a Function; Special Functions;
  Takagi Function; Weierstraß Functions.
  @ Examples: Gelbaum & Olmsted 64 [counterexamples];
    Ramsamujh CJM(89)
      [nowhere differentiable C0];
    Oldham et al 08 [atlas of functions].
  @ Generalizations: Shale JFA(74) [over discrete spaces];
    Heinonen BAMS(07) [non-smooth calculus];
    Smirnov a1009-proc [possible discretizations];
    > s.a distribution; fractional calculus;
      non-standard analysis.
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  – abbreviations
  – journals – comments
  – other sites – acknowledgements
  send feedback and suggestions to bombelli at olemiss.edu – modified 30 aug 2019