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Calculus Textbooks Boundless Calculus Building Blocks of Calculus Limits
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Concept Version 7
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Finding Limits Algebraically

Finding a Limit

Finding a Limit

The limit of $f(x)= \frac{-1}{(x+4)} + 4$ as $x$ goes to infinity can be segmented down into two parts: the limit of $\frac{−1}{(x+4)}$ and the limit of $4$. The former is $0$, while the latter is $4$. Therefore, the limit of $f(x)$ as $x$ goes to infinity is $4$.

Source

    Boundless vets and curates high-quality, openly licensed content from around the Internet. This particular resource used the following sources:

    "Limit of a function."
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Limit_of_a_function%23Properties Wikipedia CC BY.

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  • limit
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