crammy90
Member
- Joined
- Mar 26, 2006
- Messages
- 264
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2008
when exactly do we use this "special limits"
lim/(x-->infinity) 1/x = 0
e.g.
(x^2 + 2x - 3)/(3x^2 - x + 2)
i just learnt it and basically ive realised that you just get the largest number with x in it in the denominator (i.e. 3x^2) and divide everything by this. This leaves one number in the denominator without an x and on the bottom you get a 1 (as u divided 3x^2 by 3x^2) and so the answer is just the number on top?
is this pointless to learn lol could some1 give me a past hsc quedstion where we have had to know it
thanks
lim/(x-->infinity) 1/x = 0
e.g.
(x^2 + 2x - 3)/(3x^2 - x + 2)
i just learnt it and basically ive realised that you just get the largest number with x in it in the denominator (i.e. 3x^2) and divide everything by this. This leaves one number in the denominator without an x and on the bottom you get a 1 (as u divided 3x^2 by 3x^2) and so the answer is just the number on top?
is this pointless to learn lol could some1 give me a past hsc quedstion where we have had to know it
thanks