andyman wrote:
Because Chuck Norris counted to infinity. Twice.
LOL
too bad infinity is not a number
Infinity is not a real number but may be considered part of the extended real number line, in which arithmetic operations involving infinity may be performed.
You're right, infinity is not a number. But use INFINITY in Calculus to find ABSOLUTES!
The point is that you can't count to infinity, because no matter how fast you count, you will be counting forever and ever
In calculus you don't "use" infinity, when you find a limit for example you define some number that approaches infinity, but isn't "infinity".
Infinity is not a real number but may be considered part of the extended real number line, in which arithmetic operations involving infinity may be performed.
You're right, infinity is not a number. But use INFINITY in Calculus to find ABSOLUTES!
The point is that you can't count to infinity, because no matter how fast you count, you will be counting forever and ever
In calculus you don't "use" infinity, when you find a limit for example you define some number that approaches infinity, but isn't "infinity".
its an indeterminant form. just like 1^infinity, 0/0 and infinity/infinity. If you take a limit as x infinity then it will depend on the example. A good example of 0/0 (ie 0*inf depending how you write it) would be the limit of sin(x)/x as x 0.
its an indeterminant form. just like 1^infinity, 0/0 and infinity/infinity. If you take a limit as x infinity then it will depend on the example. A good example of 0/0 (ie 0*inf depending how you write it) would be the limit of sin(x)/x as x 0.
its an indeterminant form. just like 1^infinity, 0/0 and infinity/infinity. If you take a limit as x infinity then it will depend on the example. A good example of 0/0 (ie 0*inf depending how you write it) would be the limit of sin(x)/x as x 0.
its an indeterminant form. just like 1^infinity, 0/0 and infinity/infinity. If you take a limit as x infinity then it will depend on the example. A good example of 0/0 (ie 0*inf depending how you write it) would be the limit of sin(x)/x as x 0.
gg
+1 smarts
By the way, if you would like to know the limit of sin(x)/x as x 0, you can find it by using L'Hopital's rule, ie when the limit f(x)/g(x) is in a 0/0 or inf/inf form, it equals to f'(x)/g'(x).
f'(x) = d/dx sin(x) = cos(x)
g'(x) = d/dx x = 1
Therefore the limit of sin(x)/x as x 0
= lim x->0 cos(x)/1
= cos(0)/1
= 1/1
= 1