Step function


In mathematics, a function on the real numbers is called a step function if it can be written as a finite linear combination of indicator functions of intervals. Informally speaking, a step function is a piecewise constant function having only finitely many pieces.
[Image:StepFunctionExample.png|thumb|right|250px|An example of step functions (the red graph). In this function, each constant subfunction with a function value αi (i = 0, 1, 2,...) is defined by an interval Ai and intervals are distinguished by points xj (j = 1, 2,...). This particular step function is right-continuous.]

Definition and first consequences

A function is called a step function if it can be written as
where, are real numbers, are intervals, and is the indicator function of :
In this definition, the intervals can be assumed to have the following two properties:
  1. The intervals are pairwise disjoint: for
  2. The union of the intervals is the entire real line:
Indeed, if that is not the case to start with, a different set of intervals can be picked for which these assumptions hold. For example, the step function
can be written as

Variations in the definition

Sometimes, the intervals are required to be right-open or allowed to be singleton. The condition that the collection of intervals must be finite is often dropped, especially in school mathematics, though it must still be locally finite, resulting in the definition of piecewise constant functions.

Examples

Image:Dirac distribution CDF.svg|325px|thumb|The Heaviside step function is an often-used step function.

Non-examples

  • The integer part function is not a step function according to the definition of this article, since it has an infinite number of intervals. However, some authors also define step functions with an infinite number of intervals.

Properties