In mathematics, several functions are important enough to deserve their own name. This is a listing of pointers to those articles which explain these functions in more detail. There is a large theory of special functions which developed out of trigonometry, and then the needs of mathematical physics. A modern, abstract point of view contrasts large function spaces, which are infinite-dimensional and within which most functions are 'anonymous', with special functions picked out by properties such as symmetry, or relationship to harmonic analysis and group representations. See also orthogonal polynomial.
Dirac delta function: everywhere zero except for x = 0; total integral is 1. Not a function but a distribution, but sometimes informally referred to as a function, particularly by physicists and engineers.
Heaviside step function: 0 for negative arguments and 1 for positive arguments. The integral of the Dirac delta distribution.
A modern, abstract point of view contrasts large function spaces, which are infinite-dimensional and within which most functions are 'anonymous', with special functions picked out by properties such as symmetry, or relationship to harmonic analysis and group representations.
Related functions are the quarter period and the nome.
Ackermann function: in the theory of computation, a recursive function that is not primitive recursive.
In mathematics, an elementaryfunction is a function built from a finite number of exponentials, logarithms, constants, one variable, and roots of equations through composition and combinations using the four elementary operations (+ - × ÷).
The trigonometric functions and their inverses are assumed to be included in the elementaryfunctions by using complex variables (i = √-1) and the relations between the trigonometric functions and the exponential and logarithmfunctions.
For polynomials of degree four and smaller there are explicit formulas for the roots (the formulas are elementaryfunctions), but even for higher degree polynomials the fundamental theorem of algebra and the implicit function theorem assures the existence of a function that returns each one of the roots of a polynomial equation.