Definition at a point
Generic definition
Suppose
is a function of more than one variable, where
is one of the input variables to
. Fix a choice
and fix the values of all the other variables. The partial derivative of
with respect to
, denoted
, or
, is defined as the derivative at
of the function that sends
to
at
for the same fixed choice of the other input variables.
For a function of two variables
Suppose
is a real-valued function of two variables
, i.e., the domain of
is a subset of
. We define the partial derivatives as follows:
- Partial derivative with respect to
:
In words, it is the derivative at
of the function
.
This partial derivative is also denoted
or
.
- Partial derivative with respect to
:
In words, it is the derivative at
of the function
.
This partial derivative is also denoted
or
.
For a function of multiple variables
The notation here gets a little messy, so read it carefully. We consider a function
of
variables, which we generically denote
respectively. Consider a point Failed to parse (Conversion error. Server ("https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_") reported: "Cannot get mml. TeX parse error: Double subscripts: use braces to clarify"): {\displaystyle (a_{1}_{a},2,\dots ,a_{n})}
in the domain of the function. In other words, this is a point where
.
Suppose
is a natural number in the set
.
The partial derivative at this point
with respect to the variable
is defined as the derivative:
In other words, it is the derivative (evaluated at
) of the function
with respect to
, evaluated at the point
.