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khorne

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Prove (e^x-1)/x for x not equal to 0 and f(x) = 1 for x = 0 is continuous. I get i need to prove ls 1 for ( e^x -1)/x but im not exactly sure how without like le'hosp. Theorem
 

cutemouse

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A function f is cts at a iff



Pretty straightforward using this definition...

And btw this isn't MX2. It's 1st year uni stuff.
 

XTsquared

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A function f is cts at a iff



Pretty straightforward using this definition...

And btw this isn't MX2. It's 1st year uni stuff.
Afaik that stuff was taught in year 11 (at least using the formula/method posted for determining whether a function was continuous at a given point is year 11).
 

Shadowdude

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If a function is differentiable, it is continuous.
 

deterministic

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You mean finding without L'hopital's? Then try using the Taylor expansion of
 

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