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Mathematics 17 Online
OpenStudy (anonymous):

PLEASE I need help with two-sided limits

sam (.sam.):

What's the question?

sam (.sam.):

If you want to know what's two-sided limits is, A two sided limit is just the regular limit you see denoted by the lim as x approaches some value of a function. It means that if you approached that value from both sides of the graph you would arrive at the same place. A one sided limit means if you approached the graph from one particular side (from the left or from the right) you would get different values. If the limit from the left does not equal the limit from the right side of the graph, the overall limit does not exist. For example, a function such as y = x, for x > 0 cannot have a negative x-value. So the limit of this function from the left would not exist because the graph doesn't exist there, but the limit from the right would be 0.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

hold on lemme write it out

OpenStudy (anonymous):

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