Increment theorem

From HandWiki

In nonstandard analysis, a field of mathematics, the increment theorem states the following: Suppose a function y = f(x) is differentiable at x and that Δx is infinitesimal. Then Δy=f(x)Δx+εΔx for some infinitesimal ε, where Δy=f(x+Δx)f(x).

If Δx0 then we may write ΔyΔx=f(x)+ε, which implies that ΔyΔxf(x), or in other words that ΔyΔx is infinitely close to f(x), or f(x) is the standard part of ΔyΔx.

A similar theorem exists in standard Calculus. Again assume that y = f(x) is differentiable, but now let Δx be a nonzero standard real number. Then the same equation Δy=f(x)Δx+εΔx holds with the same definition of Δy, but instead of ε being infinitesimal, we have limΔx0ε=0 (treating x and f as given so that ε is a function of Δx alone).

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