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ap calculus - limits, adlfjadsf
*stephinika*
post Oct 10 2005, 05:18 PM
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yeah i've redone this question a few times and i bet its some stupid mistake but its driving me nuts...
anyone that can help? pinch.gif

find the limit of:
lim (as x approaches 4) (1/rootx - 1/2)/x-4

i keep on getting either a 0 in the numerator or denominator and its driving me crazy.
the first thing i did was simplify the numerator to (2-rootx)/2rootx then multiplied by the conjugate of 2+rootx leaving me with (4-x)/(4rootx+2x).
then i multiplied the conjugate again of 4root-2x and after some simplification i ended up with [(4rootx-2x)/4x]/x-4
i then multipied by the reciprocal to do the division but i ended up with {4rootx-2x)/4x(x-4)

now what?
(did that make any sense?)

edit.//
i need more help...haha

i'm so stuck, my brain isn't working. pinch.gif here:

find the limit:
lim (as x approaches 2) of (root(6-x) - 2)/(root(3-x)-1)

help?

and theres two more...trig limits.

lim (as x approaches 0) of (2sinx - sin2x)/xcosx

AND

lim (as x approaches 0) of (sinx)/(x + sinx)


ugh. my brain is hurting. pinch.gif this is what happens when you procrastinate and forget all you learned in class almost a weekago....

This post has been edited by stephinika: Oct 10 2005, 09:51 PM
 

Posts in this topic
stephinika   ap calculus - limits   Oct 10 2005, 05:18 PM
silver rain   Hmm, ok yay limits. OK, I don't think you need...   Oct 10 2005, 05:42 PM
stephinika   omg ilu. haha thanks, it was driving me nuts. c...   Oct 10 2005, 05:44 PM
silver rain   Hah, I actually had that first problem on my homew...   Oct 10 2005, 08:59 PM
stephinika   linda... thanks sooo much. really. if anyone can ...   Oct 10 2005, 09:50 PM


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