Analytic function
In mathematics, an analytic function is one that is locally given by a convergent power series.Complex analysis teaches us that if a function f of one complex variable is differentiable in some open disk D centered at a point c in the complex field, then it necessarily has derivatives of all orders in that same open neighborhood, and the power series
A complex analytic function of several complex variables is defined to be analytic and holomorphic at a point if it locally expandable (within a polydisk, a cartesian product of disks, centered at that point) as a convergent power series in the variables. This condition is stronger than the Cauchy-Riemann equations; in fact it can be stated
A function of several complex variables is holomorphic if and only if it satisfies the Cauchy-Riemann equations and is locally square-integrable.
For real variables, even just one, smoothness does not suffice to ensure analyticity.