I'm doing an old exam for my calculus class and the last question stumped me:
Question: If f is continuous on [a,b], show that the range of f is a closed interval [c,d]. (Hint: Be careful. You have to prove that the whole interval [c,d] is covered.
I'm really not sure how one would be able to approach this.
If f is continuous on [a,b], this implies \(\displaystyle \lim_{x \to m} f(x) = f(m)\) for m \(\displaystyle \in \left[a,b\right]\). That would mean I would have to somehow prove that f(m) \(\displaystyle \in [c,d]\) ...
Question: If f is continuous on [a,b], show that the range of f is a closed interval [c,d]. (Hint: Be careful. You have to prove that the whole interval [c,d] is covered.
I'm really not sure how one would be able to approach this.
If f is continuous on [a,b], this implies \(\displaystyle \lim_{x \to m} f(x) = f(m)\) for m \(\displaystyle \in \left[a,b\right]\). That would mean I would have to somehow prove that f(m) \(\displaystyle \in [c,d]\) ...