Continuous map

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First form

The first form:

f:AB is continuous at a if:
\forall\epsilon>0\exists\delta>0:|x-a|<\delta\implies|f(x)-f(a)|<\epsilon (note the implicit \forall x\in A)

Second form

Armed with the knowledge of what a metric space is (the notion of distance), you can extend this to the more general:

f:(A,d)\rightarrow(B,d') is continuous at a if:
\forall\epsilon>0\exists\delta>0:d(x,a)<\delta\implies d'(f(x),f(a))<\epsilon
\forall\epsilon>0\exists\delta>0:x\in B_\delta(a)\implies f(x)\in B_\epsilon(f(a))

In both cases the implicit \forall x is present. Basic type inference (the B_\epsilon(f(a)) is a ball about f(a)\in B thus it is a ball in B using the metric d')

Third form

The most general form, continuity between topologies

f:(A,\mathcal{J})\rightarrow(B,\mathcal{K}) is continuous if
\forall U\in\mathcal{K}\ f^{-1}(U)\in\mathcal{J} - that is the pre-image of all open sets in (A,\mathcal{J}) is open.

Equivalence of definitions

Continuity definitions are equivalent