Why doesn’t this limit represent the definition of derivative? 👉kzbin.info/www/bejne/eWWXYaiNiN95fcksi=Zx-wuAEkbfV5_m8a
@BlacksmithTWD10 ай бұрын
This immediately reminded me to when I was thought the limit of 1/x as x goes to 0 to illustrate why one can't divide by 0.
@winners-r4z10 ай бұрын
but if we use L Hospital rule and differentiate the numerator and denominator then we have 1/1-0 which equals 1 so by that method the limit should exist and should be equal to one
@BlacksmithTWD10 ай бұрын
@@winners-r4z Not familiar with the L Hospital rule, So I wonder how you got from x/(x-1) to 1/(1-0) or 1/1-0.
@mondherbouazizi443310 ай бұрын
@@winners-r4z We can only apply the L'Hospital's rule if the direct substitution returns an indeterminate form, that means 0/0 or ±∞/±∞. As bprp said, this is *NOT* an undeterminate form. The limit is clearly ∞, but depending on the direction from which we approach 1, the sign of ∞ changes
@おす-qz7kp10 ай бұрын
Brilliant. I like this kind of videos. Subscribed🎉
@HalobeatWatcher11 ай бұрын
Honestly I think the class didn’t learn limit from right and left or they just forget about it.
@Lordmewtwo15111 ай бұрын
Well, in both cases the function approaches 1/0. However, where x is less than 1 and greater than 0, the function is negative. Likewise, when x is greater than 1 or less than 0 (which is irrelevant to this question), the function is positive.
@JasperJanssen11 ай бұрын
I did learn about that (albeit 25 years ago, oh god, and not with this guy’s notation) and my first reaction was that it doesn’t specify from which side it is in the problem.
@thetaomegatheta11 ай бұрын
@@JasperJanssen Why is that a problem? If the side is not specified, it's obviously the standard, and not a one-sided limit.
@JasperJanssen11 ай бұрын
@@thetaomegatheta … did you watch the video? And no, there is no such thing as “the standard”.
@thetaomegatheta11 ай бұрын
@@JasperJanssen ' … did you watch the video?' Yes, I did. 'And no, there is no such thing as “the standard” Do you seriously not know about the non-one-sided limits?
@wtmayhew11 ай бұрын
This limit problem is a good illustration of why making even a rough sketch graph of the function in question can shed a lot of light. Using a graphing as a qualitative analytical tool is too often overlooked.
@levaniandgiorgi235811 ай бұрын
While i do agree that graphs are amazingly helpful,i believe more complex problems would be better suited for them,idk.. to me, the answer felt glaringly obvious from the start.
@wtmayhew11 ай бұрын
@@levaniandgiorgi2358 I largely agree. I looked at the statement and pretty much saw the answer immediately, but then I have the advantage over freshman students of having done math for close to 60 years. I’ve encouraged students to not shy away from sketching Bode plots or pole/zero diagrams in the EE courses I’ve taught. It is handy to look at a problem with more than one method to avoid mistakes. The backup method doesn’t need to be precise, just accurate enough to confirm your thinking is on track.
@ivanzonic11 ай бұрын
No reason to waste time graphing something like this
@heylolp911 ай бұрын
Graphs do what Graphs are supposed to do, give you a visual representation of the abstract equation It's helpful for people who are stronger visual learners to link the reasoning and the answer together
@sankang942511 ай бұрын
Graphs are very powerful. It's really hard to believe calculus was invented without using them. People make fun of 'trivial' stuff like rolle's theorem, but good luck proving them without graphs.
@henrikholst749010 ай бұрын
Note to self: "L'Hôpital's rule can only be applied in the case where direct substitution yields an indeterminate form, meaning 0/0 or ±∞/±∞. So if f and g are defined, L'Hôpital would be applicable only if the value of both f and g is 0. "
@homebird476510 ай бұрын
I made the same mistake
@vedantlearns751610 ай бұрын
same mistake here😢
@Sanji-ip1vd10 ай бұрын
Same and got answer one
@vintovkasnipera10 ай бұрын
If it's a school or university question, L'Hôpital's rule shouldn't be accepted as a valid proof to be honest
@homebird476510 ай бұрын
@@vintovkasnipera Why's that?
@cvkline10 ай бұрын
Cady Heron would have figured this out… it’s how she won the athlete competition in “Mean Girls.”
@StaticBlaster10 ай бұрын
I love the movie reference.
@Stags2811 ай бұрын
I used to love asking my students on these if their denominator was positive zero or negative zero. The transition from initial confusion to a-ha was one of my favorite gems from teaching.
@krishnannarayanan881911 ай бұрын
Sorry, I don't understand what positive and negative zero mean. Could you please explain?
@BlueGamingRage11 ай бұрын
@@krishnannarayanan8819shorthand for "approaches zero from the positive direction" and negative directing, respectively
@l.w.paradis210811 ай бұрын
@@krishnannarayanan8819 A shorthand way of saying to approach 0 from x < 0, or x > 0.
@Keneo110 ай бұрын
@@krishnannarayanan8819it means 0 or -0
@morijin556810 ай бұрын
@@krishnannarayanan8819 you could assume some number "h" which is a very small positive number. positive 0 means 0+h and negative 0 means 0-h . basically 0+ and 0- are approaching 0 from right and left sides respectively.
@houghwhite41111 ай бұрын
I haven't been to school for at least 5 years, and now listening to your explanation I could understand better what I could not back then
@joaooliveirarocha10 ай бұрын
I just woke up and this video was suggested. I haven't touched in limits for almost a decade so my thought was "Ive forgetten all of this". I've opened the video,watched for 3 minutes and I could feel the knowledge coming back 😂 so weird
@dscarmo8 ай бұрын
Thats how most people say videos are teaching more than school In reality its just bringing stuff back.
@Maximus.Decimus6 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂😂🤗🤗🤗
@a-bison5 ай бұрын
it feels like an old rusty gear inside your head has started to turn
@doncappuchino69283 ай бұрын
I'm still worthy feeling 😂😂
@terryendicott29393 ай бұрын
So I guess that your knowledge has limits.
@Lolwutdesu900011 ай бұрын
Are we not gonna talk about the amount of markers he's got stored in the background? I've seen entire schools have less than that lmao
@chxrryery41882 ай бұрын
He just buys the whole stock 😭😭
@TheBigGuy.Ай бұрын
my school doesnt have shit, or sistem has the students spend the whole year in a designated room and the teachers move from class to class, so the classroom becomes the responsibility of the students, so things like markers and chalk have to be bought by the students.
@contextinvideos11 ай бұрын
never took a calculus class in my life but i still end up watching these videos
@jamescollier311 ай бұрын
took multiple calc DQ and didn't really like it, but watch
@muneebmuhamed4311 ай бұрын
studying in class 10 but still watched cuz why not 😂
@jim237611 ай бұрын
Admirable curiousity. 👍
@dominicj797711 ай бұрын
@@jamescollier3 I never really liked math as a whole in college. Then once I graduated, I started learning it in depth, on my own . Then I started loving it. Now it has been 7 years since I graduated and I still learn it
@operator801411 ай бұрын
My calc class explained SOOOO MANY of the questions I had about things that didn't make sense from earlier classes. Can recommend.
@johnelectric93311 ай бұрын
Thank you. The limit pops up a lot in engineering, not just on paper but in actual physical or electrical functions. That said, in electronics we use graph paper as writing paper so doing a graph with 3 samples is quicker.
@bobtivnan11 ай бұрын
Knowing how this function's graph behaves gives all of the intuition needed. Vertical asymptote at x=1, positive to the right, negative between 0 and 1. My students often dive into the calculus without thinking about the precalculus. Sure it can be done without the precalc, but the confidence gets a big boost when we think about the graph first.
@No-cg9kj11 ай бұрын
And that's how you get 0 points for the question on an exam. You're expected to do the calculus on a calculus exam.
@bobtivnan11 ай бұрын
@@No-cg9kj read more carefully
@bramvanduijn808611 ай бұрын
Approaching a limit doesn't require a Y-axis, you're needlessly complicating the concept and conditioning them with a euclidian bias in their thinking about numbers.
@iamcoolkinda11 ай бұрын
@No-cg9kj On any calculus exam, this question would be a multiple-choice or short answer question where you’re either right or wrong, no partial credit. Graphing is sometimes way faster than doing the math. just visualizing the graph i solved this problem in probably 2-3 seconds
@thetaomegatheta11 ай бұрын
@@iamcoolkinda 'On any calculus exam, this question would be a multiple-choice or short answer question where you’re either right or wrong, no partial credit' Literally none of the math exams that I took at university had multiple-choice questions. You needed to actually demonstrate your knowledge of the topic, and, in the case of specific problems like that one, you had to present solutions.
@HenrikMyrhaug11 ай бұрын
Mathematicians: 0.999...=1 Also mathematicians: 0+ is not the same as 0
@thetaomegatheta11 ай бұрын
0+ is not an element of R at all. BPRP operating with those symbols that way irks me, as those aren't elements of any sets, let alone real numbers, and arithmetic operations are obviously not defined on them. The expression 'lim(f(x)) as x->0+ = A' simply means 'for every neighbourhood U(A) there exists S = intersection(U(0), {y | y is real and y>0}), such that for all x in S it is true that f(x) is in U(A)'.
@kajus331Ай бұрын
@@thetaomegathetawhat
@thetaomegathetaАй бұрын
@@kajus331 Which parts do you not understand?
@prycenewberg3976Ай бұрын
@@thetaomegatheta Everything after your username.
@phild80953 ай бұрын
This brings me back 50 years. Thanks. I recently talked with one of the guys who was also in that class.
@cmyk896411 ай бұрын
Finally! A problem on this channel I could solve on my own!
@RavenMobile11 ай бұрын
This channel is way out of my league 99% of the concepts he deals with... but I still come back to watch more, lol. I like how he explains things and how he writes on his whiteboard.
@tombratcher6938Ай бұрын
BRP: "You can't just say this is undefined". It's undefined.
@its_elkku13511 ай бұрын
I love this bite sized math content, feels like I'm getting a bit smarter every day :D
@frostshock1311 ай бұрын
I haven't taken calculus in my life and was interested. Only to be completely distracted by the lifetime supply of expo markers.
@_Just_Another_Guy11 ай бұрын
Btw, the graph shows that the two lines doesn't meet at a certain point (diverging on an asymptote) so that's what DNE literally means: there's no convergence at any particular point.
@bartiii761711 ай бұрын
DNE actually means "does not exist" lol, a limit can still exist even if theres no convergence at any particular point, e.g. diverging to positive infinity/ negative infinity
@bartiii761711 ай бұрын
maybe its TNCAAPP: "theres no covergence at any point"
@hyperpsych648311 ай бұрын
@@bartiii7617 limits diverging to positive or negative infinity also do not exist by the delta epsilon definition, though most people just go with the "you know what i mean" equals sign
@hydroarx11 ай бұрын
@@hyperpsych6483can't you use the epsilon-N/delta-M/N-M definitions for those limits?
@alexatg182011 ай бұрын
@@hyperpsych6483I think it depends on the topology we’re working on, tho in common topology of ℝ we regard ±∞ as DNE, so I agree with you
@benrex77759 ай бұрын
It's been a while since I did this type of stuff. Thanks for the refresher.
@franciscom.bodinho22192 ай бұрын
Every time i see a limit i just l'hosptal the thang and pray for the best 😭😭😭
@assetaden66627 ай бұрын
I still remember us being shocked when the teacher wrote positive and negative zero. We were perplexed, bamboozled even. Until he explained why and how.
@ravenousstrike01211 ай бұрын
I just literally advance self-studying Calculus 1 rn and this is my 1st video yt recommend it. I didn't know that we can also have exponential signs to determine if + or - infinity but i alr knew that it will be DNE bcuz of + & - infinity are not equal. Perfect timing! I can't wait for my next sem. You got a sub❤!
@bprpcalculusbasics11 ай бұрын
Glad to hear! Thank you!
@zxcvbn0897 ай бұрын
Im grade 7(ph) and i understand calculus :)))))
@lengeschderАй бұрын
I wish I had this channel when I was in calculus years ago. Thank you for a clear-cut explanation and getting me interested in math again.
@wills41046 ай бұрын
I was taught that, if direct substitution results in A/B, where A and B are nonzero, that’s the limit. If you’re given a limit that is A/0, the limit DNE. If you’re given a limit that is 0/B, the limit is 0. If the limit is 0/0 it’s indeterminate. Methods like multiplying by conjugate, or L’Hopitals rule come in to play. So from first glance, you can instantly tell the limit DNE because the numerator is nonzero and the denominator is 0 when direct substitution is applied.
@lugia88886 ай бұрын
You can have a limit equal to positive or negative infinity. Also, aside from Hopital you can use Taylor series.
@wills41046 ай бұрын
@@lugia8888 limit equal to positive or negative infinity is typically considered DNE though, right? Because it approaches different values from left and right.
@PixelVoyager7776 ай бұрын
@@wills4104 By definition, for a limit to exist in the first place, it must be a finite number. Both +∞ and -∞ aren't 'finite'. So when either the LHL or the RHL approaches either quantity, we say the limit doesn't exist.
@jotch_76272 ай бұрын
@@wills4104not quite. a limit at ±inf can absolutely exist, just not in the space of real numbers. it is extremely common to extend the space of real numbers with ±inf when working with limits. in this case the limit still doesnt exist in that space because it approaches both +inf and -inf from either side, but you can just as well define an extension to the space with only one infinity. its also trivial to make a function that approaches +inf (or -inf) from both sides with a form like A/0
@inestabilidadАй бұрын
I was taught to eliminate the same terms, so in this case I'd cancel both X and get 1/-1. My limit would be -1. Lol
@RedGallardo11 ай бұрын
The right usage of infinity is a gulp of fresh air.
@jorwinwithcoffee11 ай бұрын
Merry Christmas Bprp 🎉
@bprpcalculusbasics11 ай бұрын
Thank you! You too!
@Wedgievlogzclips6 ай бұрын
We were taught that the general limit for that would not exist because one side goes to infinity and the other goes to negative infinity. You would have to do a directional limit
@userchrh11 ай бұрын
I've found another method. We know that x/(x - 1) = ( (x - 1) + 1 )/(x - 1) = 1 + 1/(x - 1). So the limit equals 1 + lim_(x -> 1) { 1/(x - 1) }, or just 1 + lim_(x -> 0) { 1/x } which we know DNE.
@colinjava844711 ай бұрын
When I took a course on it, lecturer said it doesn't exist (rather than its infinity), but on the video he's calling it infinity and -infinity, and for that reason the limit doesn't exist. I think I prefer saying it doesn't exist, but saying its infinity or -infinity gives you more insight into the shape of the graph I guess.
@janskala2211 ай бұрын
@@colinjava8447 The limit exists if and only if the right limit equals the left limit. If left limit is different from right limit (in a given point), the limit does not exist. The limit is not "either inf or -inf", it just "does not exist".
@colinjava844711 ай бұрын
@@janskala22 I know, that's how I knew in 2 seconds that it doesn't exist (cause left =/= right). My point was in the video he writes infinity, when like you said it just doesn't exist. I think he knows that probably but does it for convenience.
@janskala2211 ай бұрын
@@colinjava8447 He only writes infinity on the right limit when it holds. He writes -infinity on the left limit where it holds. He does not write any definitive answer to the whole limit until he is sure it's DNE.
@colinjava844711 ай бұрын
@@janskala22 I know, I saw the video too.
@nasdfigol2 ай бұрын
I immediately thought about which direction when I saw x->1 and x-1
@ronaldjensen294811 ай бұрын
5:38 look at the asymptote on that mother function... Don't you have that t-shirt?
@1luffiz2 ай бұрын
what is "mother function" ?
@quirky.scienceАй бұрын
Mother function 😂
@iamtimsson10 ай бұрын
your teaching style is comforting i still dont understand this one due to my lack of foundational knowledge, i think. still very glad to have your vids
@glumbortango718211 ай бұрын
This question gets a bit easier if you rewrite x/(x-1) as (x-1+1)/(x-1), which is 1 - 1/(x-1), which is a little more obvious in how it behaves as x -> 1. Fairly simple explanation though.
@Joffrerap3 ай бұрын
Meh
@Galactic-MathWizardАй бұрын
Shouldn't it be 1+1/(x-1)? Also this was my first thought too!
@mhm642111 ай бұрын
Or just x/(x-1) = 1+1/(x-1) so it's 1+ (lim x-> 0 1/x) which is dne
@matthewlloyd325511 ай бұрын
Almost all limits can be evaluated by doing a thought experiment of "what happens if I move just ever so slightly to the left/right/both sides of it" - and then playing it out in your head.
@SimpdePaint6 ай бұрын
I got 0 by taking the reciprocal (1-1/x)^-1
@bananatassium700911 ай бұрын
brilliant explanation, these videos really make me feel like I'm getting a better grasp on calculus as someone who's never taken it but is passionate about math :)
@carp3tbomb3r995 ай бұрын
We always learned to take the limit approaching form the left, the right and then combine them
@mehulgamer283611 ай бұрын
I was not getting LHL = RHL so I knew the limit does not exist. Btw Merry Christmas bprp :D
@VegaOfficiaI2 ай бұрын
I just got started learning calculus, and I've been having a hard time understanding horizontal and vertical asymototpes, not sure if it's because the way my teacher teaches or some other reason. But I after clicking and watching this interesting video, you just made something click, thank you!
@thetaomegathetaАй бұрын
'not sure if it's because the way my teacher teaches or some other reason' Given that you are just starting to learn calculus, and you mention being taught asymptotes, I'm willing to bet that you aren't actually being taught asymptotes and that your teacher is just not doing a good job.
@Yupppi8 ай бұрын
Is there no fancy way like multiplying with x+1 or the usual trickery for limits I never really learned well enough to understand?
@josherney98204 ай бұрын
No. Try it yourself and see.
@Math3420106 ай бұрын
I really like this explanation since this explanation shows us that we mathematician did not do math recklessly according to the writing only, but according to the meaning of the limit hidden in the math problem.
@nirorit11 ай бұрын
I personally prefer using two sequences to show that. X_n=1+-1/n, and then the functions turns to to 1+-n, and when you take its limit you get +-infinity. Feels more rigorous to me.
@Naman_shukla41010 ай бұрын
First of all if any limit value is infinity or -infinity then we can directly say that the limit does not exist without calculating LHL and RHL If i am not wrong .🎉🎉
@thetaomegatheta10 ай бұрын
'then we can directly say that the limit does not exist without calculating LHL and RHL' Depends on what space we are looking for a limit in. You seem to consider the real line (where it is obvious that the limit DNE), BPRP considers the standard two-point compactification of the real line (case examined in the video), and there is also the standard one-point compactification of the real line (where the limit does exist, and it is inf). Furthermore, some spaces are not Hausdorff, meaning that the same function, under the same topological base, can have multiple distinct limits.
@Felinaro11 ай бұрын
From the times, when I was a student, I remember three different intinities: "+∞", "-∞" and "∞". So we explicitly used sign, if the infinity had one, and not used if that was "just the infinity", when sign is unknown (or does not matter). Is this the case nowadays? You are never using "+∞" notation, always omitting "+" sign...
@Mr.Not_Sure11 ай бұрын
Same
@thetaomegatheta11 ай бұрын
The space that is assumed in the video is the standard extension of R with two points at infinity - +∞ and -∞. Unsigned ∞ does not exist in that space. I think it's a bad decision on the author's part to not explicitly state what space we are looking for a limit in, as in other extensions of R that limit does exist.
@Ligatmarping2 ай бұрын
Yeah, this is a pretty basic video that doesn't enter into that, but that's exactly how we treat in class (I teach at University of Buenos Aires). Most time basic calculus students mess with the + or - infty and I tell to just rite infty symbol since we just search for vertical asymptotes only. So we just care on when the function collapses. Although there are some teachers who put enphasis on the sign, I don't agree to go into that when the students are struggling to more basic things at that level.
@vmycode5142Ай бұрын
very proud of myself for figuring this out before you told us. :D
@weo94739 ай бұрын
Everybody gangster until g(x)=0
@juanmacedo88163 ай бұрын
-_-
@IK_Knight4 ай бұрын
Using precalculus and algebra 2 techniques we can easily determine the asymptote of the function and later the limit x/(x-1) we can use zero product property on (x-1) which will give us a vertical asymptote of 1 so when approaching x->1 u will get both infinity and -infinity showing that our limit DNE
@theknightikins939711 ай бұрын
While I do like the idea of the plus on the zero meaning a number arbitrarily close to zero, for problems like this I always think of it a “positive” zero. It’s functionally the same and gets the same answer, I just find it easier to understand, if you divide a positive by a positive, you get a positive. Is the zero positive or negative, not really, but if anyone is having trouble understanding this, try thinking of it this way.
@fioscotm11 ай бұрын
Huh, that actually is a really nice way of thinking of it. Thanks for this!
@tomekk.188911 ай бұрын
It might help you with limits but it's not functionally the same. It's worth learning what 0+ actually means and sticking to that it will help you later with series etc
@derekyu44309 ай бұрын
in my opinion, this question is the best way to tell us why concepts are important.
@jmz_5011 ай бұрын
Good video as always
@alextonev3017Ай бұрын
All you have to do for most of these questions is think “how will the graph look like” and it makes it relatively easy
@andrewparker863611 ай бұрын
I personally think it's easier to approach these problems by changing the limiting value to 0. That way it's obvious what's +ve and -ve. In this case, we could change the limit to lim e->0 (1 + e) / e by substituting x for 1 + e (e is supposed to be epsilon here). Then you can work out lim e->+0 and e->-0 and it's a little easier (IMO).
@StaticBlaster10 ай бұрын
I did all this in my head. No joke. I know the number to the left of 1 minus 1 must be negative 0.00001 (something like that) and the number to the right of 1 minus 1 must be positive 0.00001 so I can include the right-handed limit approaches positive infinity and the left-handed limit approaches negative infinity, so the general limit does not exist. Easy peazy lemon squeezy.
@Umbra45111 ай бұрын
Nice video! It’s been a while since I’ve done this. Since we did indeed get the conclusion that we would expect from inspection, could you give an example of a limit that looks DNE at a glance, but turns out not to be?
@literallyjustayoutubecomme159111 ай бұрын
Well, that depends on how good your glances are, doesn’t it :)
@Steve_Stowers11 ай бұрын
@@literallyjustayoutubecomme1591 Agree. To beginning Calculus students, a limit often "looks DNE" as soon as they see that 0 in the denominator (even if the numerator also approaches 0).
@jackbrax780811 ай бұрын
As someone else stated, it sort of depends on how good your “glance.” Is. If your very proficient with limits and calculus, you potentially could have know just by looking at the limit what the answer would be. But a great example in this case would be x/(x-1)^2. Having a square term in the denominator actually causes the limit to approach positive infinity from both the left AND the right. Therefore the limit actually approach’s infinity and therefore does exist!
@Steve_Stowers11 ай бұрын
@@jackbrax7808 Depends on what you mean by "exist." According to most basic Calculus books I'm familiar with, if the limit is ∞, the limit doesn't exist-you're just being more specific about how/why it doesn't exist.
@jackbrax780811 ай бұрын
@@Steve_Stowers I just double checked my definitions and turns out your right. It doesn’t exist but both sides tend to infinity. But due to infinity not being a number, it doesn’t exist. But you can say the limit tends to infinity.
@clmasse11 ай бұрын
It's normal, there is no limit. Ask the good question: what is the + or the - limit? The problem is often the nut behind the whiteboard.
@marvinliraDE11 ай бұрын
If you have a function 'f' which is defined on a subset 'M' of real numbers and you have some real number 'y', then the left-side limit 'lim_{x->y-} f(x)' is defined as the limit 'lim_{x->y} g(x)' where 'g' is the same as 'f' but restricted to the subset of 'M' containing only the numbers that are at most 'y'. The right-side limit is defined analogous.
@marvinliraDE11 ай бұрын
So visually speaking, you cut your function at the point 'y' into a left side and a right side and handle each side on its own.
@OnurOzalp-personal11 ай бұрын
how did u know i nut behind the whiteboard? also he answered those as + and - infinity already.
@clmasse11 ай бұрын
@@marvinliraDEThe point is, the limit of the function defined on ℝ\{1} doesn't exist. The problem is in the question (asking for something that doesn't exist,) not in the answer, for DNE is not the limit of the function.
@dielaughing7311 ай бұрын
@@clmasse I'm not sure there's anything wrong with asking a mathematical question for which there is no defined answer. Would you feel better if the question was "what is the limit of as x approaches , if such limit exists"? Because I'd think the qualification is implied for students beyond the most rudimentary level of maths.
@pinnaclerigde305611 ай бұрын
it is ±infinite depends on which side you take. - if approach from -inf to 1 + if approach inf to 1. You can easily check using scientific calculator. Type in the function and calculate wiith x= n±10^(-6)
@thetaomegatheta11 ай бұрын
'it is ±infinite depends on which side you take' lim(x/(x-1)) as x->1 considers points in the entire neighbourhood of 1. You are thinking of one-sided limits.
@welcometotheshow524711 ай бұрын
I always loved problems like this, it always reminded me that when u set up a number line the distance btw what ever numbers you end up choosing is infinite and if you wanted to count every number btw that distance you would always be approaching a certain number and never really reaching it.
@michaelm111 ай бұрын
This is incredible. I cannot believe it. This has got to be some kind of a record. A miracle. I tried it and I got it right. I never get things right. This got to be the exception to prove the rule. Wait...
@colinjava844711 ай бұрын
I guessed that it was undefined in 2 seconds, cause its essentially 1/x, and its a limit from both sides.
@danilonascimentorj11 ай бұрын
look at the boxes of black and red pens on the right.
@tomctutor11 ай бұрын
Im jealous too.
@Harishkumarindianrailways11 ай бұрын
Why L hopital rule is not used here
@OK-ei7io11 ай бұрын
We don’t have an indeterminate form.
@YourNeighbourJack11 ай бұрын
Because L’hôpital rule only works with 0/0 or infinity/infinity
@Harishkumarindianrailways11 ай бұрын
Understood
@teelo1200011 ай бұрын
Because the injury isn't bad enough to go to L'Hospital.
@J-M78411 ай бұрын
@@teelo12000 This isn’t ‘la Páris’! 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
@4fgaming9254 ай бұрын
Im thankful to my teacher for giving importance to the concept of approaching from left and right side otherwise I couldn't have solved it
@adrified935211 ай бұрын
DNE since f has a VA at x = 1 and f is odd
@epikherolol818911 ай бұрын
Vertical asymptote?
@thetaomegatheta11 ай бұрын
If we just assume the standard extension of R with two points at infinity, then yes. If we don't, there is another fairly standard space where the limit does exist - the standard extension of R with one point at infinity.
@xinpingdonohoe39786 ай бұрын
f is not odd at all.
@hopaop502210 ай бұрын
Class need solve Demidovich and read Zorich
@thetaomegatheta10 ай бұрын
I'd add Engelking's 'General Topology' as a companion to Zorich, as Zorich takes an implicit topological approach in his textbooks.
@0xinvestor10 ай бұрын
Please HELP me. - at 4:53 how did you say that 1- was still positive as 0.99999 ? I need answert or else I wont be able to sleep and I have no one who can explain me like this. Please help.
@thetaomegatheta10 ай бұрын
Well, every neighbourhood of 1 in the real line contains elements that are less than 1 but are greater than 0. Specifically, 0.99999 is less than 1, but is greater than 0.
@xinpingdonohoe39786 ай бұрын
Imagine a number very slightly lower than 1. Such as 0.9999. That's still greater than 0.
@no_nuts06143 ай бұрын
1- is the number before 1
@RajveerSingh-zl3mv5 күн бұрын
1- or 1+ is used to denote that the number is neglegibaly lower than whichever number is used before the sogn therefore 1- lies btwn 0 and 1 which is positive . He said 0.999999... to show that its just a realy close number to 1
@andybogart25032 ай бұрын
It’s helpful to me to graph it so you can see the two branches of the function diverging near the asymptote.
@uberless111 ай бұрын
I am absolutely certain that my Calculus teacher from 20ish years ago would have hated your 0+ notation…. She wanted derivative tests all the way. EDIT: To clarify, she would obviously have been fine with 0+ in the initial limit, but she wouldn't have liked 0+ as a result of partial computation. [Though it does seem intuitive as shown in this video.] She would have considered this an "invalid shortcut".
@tomctutor11 ай бұрын
f' (x) := lim (h->0) (f(x+h) - f(x))/h well that's how I was taught how to find the derivative, using First Principles as it were. However when they teach Calc1 now they miss out this and expect you to look the derivative up in a table, usually supplied with the exam, whats the point of even learning calc this way! 😟
@bernhardbauer530111 ай бұрын
1/0 is not allowed. 1+ and 1- are not numbers. 1/x has a singularity at x=0. This singularity is shifted in his example.
@anitek437 ай бұрын
Componendo and dividendo enters the chat.
@bDe4d11 ай бұрын
Man, my teacher has been hammering our class wuth this for months and bearly anyone understood even the priniples of "limit" and how you check for it. I'm just now trying to keep up with the material as we're quite past that and even had a small test (which I failed, miserably) and I'm going to definitely retake it soon as thanks to you I understand everything perfectly, even though English is not my first language haha Lots of love from Poland! Cheers!
@thetaomegatheta11 ай бұрын
'Man, my teacher has been hammering our class wuth this for months and bearly anyone understood even the priniples of "limit" and how you check for it' Let me guess, your teacher said that a limit is something that a function gets closer and closer to as its argument gets closer to some point? Yeah, I'd advice looking up an actual definition of a limit.
@shawnmiller47819 ай бұрын
I think I found my problem with high school math. Getting distracted. Such I was by this video by that impressive ready to go supply of dry erase markers in the lower right hand of the screen
@bprpcalculusbasics11 ай бұрын
Is this a well-defined limit? Calculus question on Reddit r/askmath kzbin.info/www/bejne/jZKpdqSkhaytedE
@ChilltheImpaler2 ай бұрын
Negative infinity makes sense to me only needed to put in a couple of values to work it out. Been over 10 years since I've touched limits
@rickquackstley2 ай бұрын
It’s a two sided limit
@r75shell11 ай бұрын
Do you think a teacher or other person who check your work will be fine with 1+/0+ argumentation? I think better would be substitute y = (x - 1) so, we need to calc (y + 1) / y with y -> 0 then (y + 1)/y = 1 + 1/y, thus for y > 0 it (y + 1) / y > 1 / y, but 1/y -> infinity but for y < 0 it doesn't work. so I think just use some fact lim (x + C) = C + lim (x). idk.
@dielaughing7311 ай бұрын
It's how I was taught at uni. Best to check with your professor if you want to be sure. Don't forget you can always (and often should) add annotations in plain language explaining what you're doing and why. Then it doesn't really matter what notation you use, as long as it's clearly defined and consistently applied.
@AryanRaj-fz7dd11 ай бұрын
@@dielaughing73 our professor also uses these notations what the hell is wrong with it
@billmilligan727211 ай бұрын
This is how I was taught as well. If a teacher or other person who will check your work isn't fine with it, it's time to talk to their boss.
@kazedcat11 ай бұрын
Just replace 1+ with 1+ε and 1- with 1-ε.
@anonymousf7byyj11 ай бұрын
@@billmilligan7272thanks for your input Karen
@meenstreek11 ай бұрын
Getting heavy Mean Girl vibes here...
@melonenlord272311 ай бұрын
Of course class couldn't figure it out if no solution exists 😂
@isaacbruner6511 ай бұрын
There is a solution and the solution is that the limit does not exist.
@omp19911 ай бұрын
@@isaacbruner65 To say that the limit does not exist is just another way of saying that there is no solution to the problem of finding the limit. The statement that a solution does not exist is not in itself a solution. If it were, then you could say that every equation has a solution, which makes a nonsense of the concept of a solution.
@kazedcat11 ай бұрын
@@omp199it's different with limits. "The limit does not exist" is part of the set of possible solution with limits. Similar to NaN is a possible answer to a floating point operation even though NaN literally means Not a Number.
@omp19911 ай бұрын
@@kazedcat No. It's not "different with limits". A solution is a value or set of values that satisfy a given set of conditions. If the condition is that of being the limit of an expression, then the nonexistence of a limit implies the nonexistence of a solution. As for "Nan", you are bringing programming language conventions into a discussion of mathematics. A programming language might have a function that returns NaN in certain circumstances, but that has nothing to do with mathematics.
@kazedcat11 ай бұрын
@@omp199 Programming is mathematics. The Turing Machine is a mathematical object.
@setsunaes10 ай бұрын
Wow, I still remember calculus!
@darcash173811 ай бұрын
Nice, this is exactly how I did it. Can you post more proofs for common derivatives using the limit definition of (f(x+h) - f(x))/h? I think it could be fun to do a whole series on that. I tried the polynomial one for myself, and was able to confirm that (x^n)’, using binomial theorem and being left with just the second term was nx^(n-1). I tried getting the derivative of e^x = e^x, but I couldn’t pull it off tho, wasn’t sure how to bring out the h 😂
@Syndicalism10 ай бұрын
exp(x) is factored out of the limit. The remaining limit is [exp(h)-1]/h which evaluates to 1.
@darcash173810 ай бұрын
@@Syndicalism nice! I looked at the standard way I guess you could call it for evaluating the last part, where you say that some variable, eg k = the top part, so it becomes k->0 k/ln(k+1). Bringing the k up top to the bottom w reciprocal, and then log power rule it becomes 1/ln(e) = 1. The main part that was sort of unexpected for me was the start, setting the top to a variable. How might we stumble upon this-just trying it out bc it’s limit approaches 0 as well? Also do you think that mathematicians found out the derivatives first and then tasked themselves with proving them?
@arandomperson833611 ай бұрын
I graphed it and it approaches negative infinity from the left and positive infinity from the right so if I remember my calculus correctly that means the limit doesn't exist, although the one-sided limits do. Now I will watch the video and see if my 2-second-effort-because-I'm-not-in-college-anymore answer is correct... Yay I got the right answer on a math video for once!
@lucaspanto965011 ай бұрын
Looks like it just tends to ∞
@isaacbruner6511 ай бұрын
That would imply that it tends to positive infinity which is obviously not the case.
@lucaspanto965011 ай бұрын
@@isaacbruner65 🤓
@thetaomegatheta11 ай бұрын
@@isaacbruner65 No, it would not. There are multiple extensions of R, one of which is assumed by BPRP in the video and has two points at infinity, and another one has only one point at infinity, which we can call 'unsigned infinity' for clarity's sake. In the case of the latter one, the person you responded to is absolutely correct, and it is a bad thing that BPRP did not explicitly bring up the matter of the space in which we are supposed to look for a limit.
@aarusharya565811 ай бұрын
@@lucaspanto9650 Your dumbass said the limit tends to infinity. I doubt you're in a position to use that emoji.
@lool84216 ай бұрын
i feel like the answer is either positive or negative infinity, but it's not defined from which side are we approaching x, limits tend to have positive and negative zeroes that gives 2 possible outcomes for 1 limit so it just doesn't work
@epikherolol818911 ай бұрын
I figured out it DNE in 5s lol
@General12th11 ай бұрын
Do you want a sticker?
@Sukunut11 ай бұрын
@@General12th lol
@angelmatematico459 ай бұрын
If the limit tends to infinity, it does not exist, because infinity is a concept, not a number. What infinity means in this context is that as we get closer to the limit, the value is always greater.
@winners-r4z10 ай бұрын
but if we use L Hospital rule and differentiate the numerator and denominator then we have 1/1-0 which equals 1 so by that method the limit should exist and should be equal to one
@thetaomegatheta10 ай бұрын
'but if we use L Hospital rule' We get nothing, as L'Hopital (has nothing to do with hospitals) requires either of the indeterminate forms 0/0 and inf/inf. 'and differentiate the numerator and denominator then we have 1/1-0 which equals 1' And that is obviously incorrect, as even in the interval (1/2, 3/2) (which is a neighbourhood of 1) we have the infimum of |f(x)-1| = 2 for x in that interval and f(x) = x/(x-1), meaning that lim(f(x)) as x->1 cannot be 1.
@winners-r4z10 ай бұрын
Dangg, thanks a lot dude@@thetaomegatheta just after reading that first line of your comment i was like " ahh shit , i forgot bout that" XD
@joyneelrocks8 ай бұрын
You can use graphical methods too: x = x - 1 + 1 ==> x/(x - 1) = 1 + 1/(x - 1). So y = x/(x - 1) is basically the 1/x graph shifted to right by 1 and up by 1 unit. As x -> 1, x/(x - 1) diverges. So limit does not exist if you know the 1/x graph well.
@dropBigMi6 ай бұрын
my first thought it should be the same as lim (x->0)1/x (substract 1 and add 1in the numerator, simplify to lim(x->1) 1 + 1/(x-1), 1 is a constant and don't really change anything here and finally lim(x->1) 1/(x-1) looks almost like lim (x->0) 1/x, which explanation, usually always given in a class rooms).
@wil-fri11 ай бұрын
From a programmer POV is that, the smaller positive or the "smaller" negative number you can represent or show
@thetaomegatheta11 ай бұрын
You forgot to finish your sentence
@perplexedon98344 ай бұрын
I dunno if its strictly valid, but my instinct is to transform it using fraction decomposition: x/(x-1)=1+1/(x-1) and substitution of t=x-1 to be: lim t→0 1+1/t Which is immediately obvious as undefined
@Crazy_Diamond_756 ай бұрын
If you've done the x/x limit before, it's super easy--graph looks the same just shifted 1 unit to the right due to the "-1" in the denominator.
@kishwaralamgir446810 ай бұрын
I thought writing 1/0 was a crime
@nicolastorres14711 ай бұрын
Converges in the one point compactification of the reals 🤯
@eliteteamkiller3196 ай бұрын
Back in Calculus 1 I got this wrong by multiplying by (x + 1)/(x + 1), giving me x(x + 1)/[(x-1)(x+1)] = (x^2 + x)/(x^2 - 1) Then I applied Le Hospital and got (2x + 1)/2x and came away with 3/2. Oops. *Also I will forever call L'Hôpital‘s rule Le Hospital.
@eliteteamkiller3196 ай бұрын
Of course I later realized 1/0, as mentioned in the video, didn’t satisfy the criteria necessary to use Le Hospital’s rule.
@Gogram062 ай бұрын
I call it eel( yes the animal) hospital
@electrodynamicorb654811 ай бұрын
It’s been 16 years since I’ve taken any calculus but knew right away it was undefined or does not exist
@StAngerNo110 ай бұрын
I don't know why this video got recommended to me. I would not have know the correct notation, but figuring out the answer is quite simple.
@edrodriguez511611 ай бұрын
Merry Christmas Mr. bprp!
@-es2bf3 ай бұрын
graph the function, done.
@goldenhate66492 ай бұрын
Or do the poor mans technique and do a step away from 0. Plug is 0.9 on bottom and it becomes supper obvious what the answer is
@somebodyxd06910 ай бұрын
took me like 3 seconds but my lack of trust in myself and curiosity kept me here lol
@Jaggerto19 күн бұрын
OMG, I just noticed the boxes of markers. Oowee
@marsam7772Ай бұрын
this is one of the first times I felt smart watching those 😭
@kaikulimu11 ай бұрын
Good old math yay! I simply said "negative infinity" since I only considered x approaching 1 as x = 0.99999999, but yeah it could have been x = 1.000000001 too.