Anyone think they can help me with random problems i get stuck on? Only help, not doing all the work for me.
prove lim x->4 (7-3x) = -5 using (epsilon delta) definition. E = Epsilon D = Delta
|f(x) - L| < E whenever 0<|x-a|<D
|(7-3x) - (-5)| < E whenever 0<|x-4|<D
|12-3x|<E ...
-3|x-4|<E ...
|x-4|> -E/3 ...
The < sign switches to > because im dividing by a negative correct? If so, |x-4|<D and |x-4|> -E/3 dont match up so i cant find what D equals. My teacher is completely useless so im trying to follow the book. All i understand right now is to break down |f(x) - L| < E to look like 0<|x-4|<D, to find out what D equals. Then use 0<|x-4|<D and expand(?) to make it look like |f(x) - L| < E again and theres the proof.
prove lim x->4 (7-3x) = -5 using (epsilon delta) definition. E = Epsilon D = Delta
|f(x) - L| < E whenever 0<|x-a|<D
|(7-3x) - (-5)| < E whenever 0<|x-4|<D
|12-3x|<E ...
-3|x-4|<E ...
|x-4|> -E/3 ...
The < sign switches to > because im dividing by a negative correct? If so, |x-4|<D and |x-4|> -E/3 dont match up so i cant find what D equals. My teacher is completely useless so im trying to follow the book. All i understand right now is to break down |f(x) - L| < E to look like 0<|x-4|<D, to find out what D equals. Then use 0<|x-4|<D and expand(?) to make it look like |f(x) - L| < E again and theres the proof.