- #1
Joshrk22
- 18
- 0
Yesterday, I took a quiz in my Calc class. My teacher threw some limits on there which I believed were easy. One of them was...
[tex]\lim_{x\rightarrow 1}\frac{1}{(x-1)^2}[/tex]
For this one I put "Limit does not exist as x approaches 1." I come in today and she tells the class that a limit does exist. I didn't want to argue with her but I trusted my gut feeling and believed we (the class) were right. I come home and check my other Calc book and in there it says that a limit does not exist. So what is it? Is she right, or is my class wrong?
[tex]\lim_{x\rightarrow 1}\frac{1}{(x-1)^2}[/tex]
For this one I put "Limit does not exist as x approaches 1." I come in today and she tells the class that a limit does exist. I didn't want to argue with her but I trusted my gut feeling and believed we (the class) were right. I come home and check my other Calc book and in there it says that a limit does not exist. So what is it? Is she right, or is my class wrong?