Uniform Convergence Practice Questions, Quiz, and Step-by-Step Lesson - improve your math skills with focused questions and clear explanations.
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If \(f_n\to f\) uniformly and \(f\) is nonzero, does that force every \(f_n\) nonzero?
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Uniform Convergence
Uniform Convergence Practice Quiz with a Step-by-Step Interactive Lesson
Use the quiz at the top of the page to practice uniform convergence: the difference between pointwise and uniform limits, the sup-norm condition \(\sup_{x\in E}|f_n(x)-f(x)|\to0\), examples such as \(x/n\), \(x^n\), and \(x/(n+x)\), the uniform Cauchy criterion, the Weierstrass M-test for function series, preservation of continuity, boundedness, nonnegativity, and shared Lipschitz constants, exchanging limits with integrals on bounded intervals, and the extra hypotheses needed for derivatives. If you want a refresher, open the lesson for short examples and quick checks.
How this uniform convergence practice works
- 1. Take the quiz: answer questions about uniform error, examples, series tests, and limit-interchange theorems.
- 2. Open the lesson: review definitions, recognition tests, worked examples, and single-answer checks.
- 3. Retry: return to the quiz and decide which estimate or theorem applies to each problem.
What you will learn in the uniform convergence lesson
Definition and sup norm
- Uniform convergence: one \(N\) works for every point of the domain
- Sup-norm test: \(\|f_n-f\|_\infty=\sup_{x\in E}|f_n(x)-f(x)|\to0\)
- Pointwise convergence lets \(N\) depend on \(x\); uniform convergence does not
Standard examples
- \(x/n\) is uniform on \([0,1]\) but not on \([0,\infty)\)
- \(x^n\to0\) uniformly on \([0,a]\) for \(0<a<1\), but not on \([0,1]\)
- Endpoint behavior and unbounded domains are common sources of failure
Series and Cauchy tests
- Uniform Cauchy: control \(\sup_x|f_n(x)-f_m(x)|\) for all large \(m,n\)
- Weierstrass M-test: compare \(|u_n(x)|\) with a summable numerical sequence
- Uniform convergence of a series forces its terms to go uniformly to \(0\)
Limit-interchange theorems
- Uniform limits of continuous functions are continuous
- Uniform convergence on \([a,b]\) allows \(\lim\int f_n=\int\lim f_n\)
- If every \(f_n\) is Lipschitz with the same constant \(L\), then the limit is also Lipschitz with constant \(L\)
Back to the quiz
When you are ready, return to the quiz at the top of the page and keep practicing uniform convergence.

