- #1
BloodyFrozen
- 353
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Foundations of "Formal Limits"
In Spivak's 4th Edition, one examples says:
"The function f(x) = x2 is a little more interesting. Presumably, we should be able to show that f(x) approaches 9 near 3. This means that we need to be small enough to show how to ensure the inequality
l x2 - 9 l < ε
for any given positive number ε by requiring l x - 3 l to be small enough. The obvious first step is to write
l x2 - 9 l = l x - 3 l* l x + 3 l,
which gives use the useful l x - 3 l factor. Unlike the situation with the previous examples, however, the extra factor is l x + 3 l, which isn't a convenient constant like 3 or 3,000,000. But the only crucial thing is to make sure that we can say something about how big l x + 3 l is. ............
MY question is why is l x - 3 l useful and not l x + 3 l?
Also, I don't really understand this. Anyone care to explain? (I don't think this is ε-δ because δ hasn't been introduced yet.)
so confusing...
In Spivak's 4th Edition, one examples says:
"The function f(x) = x2 is a little more interesting. Presumably, we should be able to show that f(x) approaches 9 near 3. This means that we need to be small enough to show how to ensure the inequality
l x2 - 9 l < ε
for any given positive number ε by requiring l x - 3 l to be small enough. The obvious first step is to write
l x2 - 9 l = l x - 3 l* l x + 3 l,
which gives use the useful l x - 3 l factor. Unlike the situation with the previous examples, however, the extra factor is l x + 3 l, which isn't a convenient constant like 3 or 3,000,000. But the only crucial thing is to make sure that we can say something about how big l x + 3 l is. ............
MY question is why is l x - 3 l useful and not l x + 3 l?
Also, I don't really understand this. Anyone care to explain? (I don't think this is ε-δ because δ hasn't been introduced yet.)
so confusing...