I got stuck while doing exercise of the Apostol's Calculus, the exercise 28 of Section 5.5.
Here's the question
Given a function $f$ such that the integral $A(x) = \int_a^xf(t)dt$ exists for each $x$ in an interval $[a, b]$. Let $c$ be a point in the open interval $(a, b)$. Consider the following ten statements about this $f$ and this A:
And there are five (a) ~ (e) statements on the left, and five ($\alpha$) ~ ($\epsilon$) statements on the right. The author asks the reader to decide the implicative relation from statements on the left to statements on the right. I thought I answered correctly but the solution at the end tells different. I don't know why this is wrong.
(d) $f'(c)$ exists. $\implies$ ($\epsilon$) $A'$ is continuous at c.
This is my argument: By the Example 7 of Section 4.4, the differentiability of $f$ at c implies the continuity of $f$ at c. Since $f$ is differentiable at c, $f$ is continuous at c, so that $A'$, which equals to $f$, should continuous at c.
But the solution at the end says (d) does not implies ($\epsilon$).
Sorry for the partializing the problem, it maybe tough to point out what is wrong.