Calculus genius help me out. I need help solving limits indeterminations. I don't get what to do after I get inf/inf inf-inf 0/0 or 0xinf
I'd appreciate some tips and procedures to what should I do in each case to lift the indeterminations
I should be a pro doing this but I'm not at all therefore I could really use some help guys,
l'hospital's rule brainlet
>>8777804
According to our national maths plan I can't use that untill next year :/
Where are all the calculus beasts at?
>>8777812
>...national maths plan I can't use that untill next year
>can't use that
>maths
>European """education"""
>>8777801
Inf/inf: like Keit ai, finds a way
ie lim (x^2 - 1)/(x - 1) = lim x + 1
Something/0 = inf
0*something = 0
That's all without L Hospital my famalam
>>8777812
If you can't use l'hopitals then just try to algebraically modify your function until you find something that makes sense.
That and remember that continuous functions preserve limits.
Your pic looks shit so give me an example of a problem they give you.
>>8777801
Algebra and L'hop. Seems really silly not to teach you L'hop as it's the most useful tool for evaluating limits.
>>8777812
Unless you're in high school, your education's fucked. Such basic thing should be in the first semester.
>>8777804
It's Hôpital you piece of shit.
>>8778002
Spoken like a true Amerishart that does
"""""""""""""""""""""""""Calculus"""""""""""""""""""""""""
before Analysis.
>>8779121
You don't need rigor to be introduced to the world of higher math, eurofag.
Our calculus course serves as a nice segue into higher levels math and calc as a whole is pretty intuitive.
>>8779250
France,
rapresentative Analysis reference:
Éléments de mathématique (Nicolas Bourbaki)
[math]12[/math] Fields Medals, [math]1.86\cdot 10^{-7}[/math] per capita.
USA,
rapresentative Analysis reference:
Calculus (James Stewart)
[math]14[/math] Fields Medals, [math]0.43\cdot 10^{-7}[/math] per capita.
Europe: 26 medals without counting Russia.
>>8779307
Yeah but we got terry tao. Score one for the burgers!
1 up infinity is 1 ALWAYS.
>>8779440
>1 up infinity is 1 ALWAYS.
That's true for every constant.