1/z(ez-1) at its poles
The singularities are "z = 0" and "z = 2n\u03c0i, n = \u00b11, \u00b12, . . . ."
The singularity at "z = 0" is a pole of order 2 since "z = 0" is a zero of order 2 of "z(e^z-1)".
"=\\dfrac{1}{z^2(1+z\/2!+z^2\/3!+...)}=\\dfrac{1}{z^2}g(z), g(0)\\not=0"
The singularities "z = 2n\u03c0i, n = \u00b11, \u00b12, . . . ." are simple poles since they are simple zeros of "\\dfrac{1}{z(e^z-1)}."
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