Teachers Paradise School Supplies Teacher Resources Free Encyclopedia
Teachers Paradise FREE Teaching Resources
Home Arts Crafts Audio Visual Equipment Office Supplies Teacher Resources
Main Page | Edit this page

Indeterminate form

In calculus, the expressions

[others?]

are indeterminate forms; if f(x) and g(x) both approach 0 as x approaches some number, or x approaches ∞ or − ∞, then

can approach any real number or ∞ or − ∞, or fail to converge to any point on the extended real line, depending on which functions f and g are; similar remarks are true of the other indeterminate forms displayed above. For example

and

Direct substitution of the number that x approaches into either of these functions leads to the indeterminate form 0/0, but both limits actually exist and are 1 and 14 respectively.

The indeterminate form does not imply the limit does not exist. Algebraic elimination or applying L'Hopital's rule can be used to simplify the expression so the limit can be more easily and actually evaluated.

This article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by fixing it.




Pay for Educational Supplies & Teaching Supplies with Visa, Master Card, American Express, Discover or Paypal.
TeachersParadise.com HOME | Safe Shopping Guarantee | Help Desk
All trademarks & brands are the property of their respective owners.
Legal Notice 2000-2008 TeachersParadise.com, Inc. All Rights Reserved