Answer to Question #273542 in Functional Analysis for raiz

Question #273542

If a function f is not defined at x = a then the limit lim f(x) as x approaches a never exists. true or false


1
Expert's answer
2021-11-30T18:24:13-0500

The statement is False.

Counterexample

Let "f(x)=\\dfrac{\\sin x}{x}."

The function "f(x)" is not defined at "x=0."


"\\lim\\limits_{x\\to 0^-}f(x)=\\lim\\limits_{x\\to 0^-}\\dfrac{\\sin x}{x}=1"

"\\lim\\limits_{x\\to 0^+}f(x)=\\lim\\limits_{x\\to 0^+}\\dfrac{\\sin x}{x}=1"

We see that


"\\lim\\limits_{x\\to 0^-}f(x)=1=\\lim\\limits_{x\\to 0^+}f(x)"

Then "\\lim\\limits_{x\\to 0}f(x)" exists, and


"\\lim\\limits_{x\\to 0}f(x)=1"

The function "f(x)=\\dfrac{\\sin x}{x}" has a removable discontinuity at "x=0."


Therefore the statement "If a function "f" is not defined at "x = a" then the limit "\\lim\\limits_{x\\to a}f(x)" never exists" is false.



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