In
mathematics, several
functions or groups of functions are important enough to deserve their own names. 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
statistics and
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 List of types of functions
Elementary functions
Elementary functions are functions built from basic operations (e.g. addition, exponentials, logarithms...)
Algebraic functions
Algebraic functions are functions that can be expressed as the solution of a polynomial equation with integer coefficients.
- Polynomials: Can be generated by addition and multiplication alone.
- Rational functions: A ratio of two polynomials.
- Power functions (with a rational power): A function of the form .
- Square root: Yields a number whose square is the given one .
Elementary transcendental functions
Transcendental functions are functions that are not algebraic.
Basic special functions
Number theoretic functions
Antiderivatives of elementary functions
Gamma and related functions
Elliptic and related functions
Bessel and related functions
Riemann zeta and related functions
Hypergeometric and related functions
Iterated exponential and related functions
Other standard special functions
Miscellaneous functions
External links