Properties of Limits: Learn It 3

Finding the Limit of a Quotient

Finding the limit of a function expressed as a quotient can be more complicated. We often need to rewrite the function algebraically before applying the properties of a limit. If the denominator evaluates to 0 when we apply the properties of a limit directly, we must rewrite the quotient in a different form. One approach is to write the quotient in factored form and simplify.

How To: Given the limit of a function in quotient form, use factoring to evaluate it.

  1. Factor the numerator and denominator completely.
  2. Simplify by dividing any factors common to the numerator and denominator.
  3. Evaluate the resulting limit, remembering to use the correct domain.
Evaluate [latex]\underset{x\to 2}{\mathrm{lim}}\left(\dfrac{{x}^{2}-6x+8}{x - 2}\right)[/latex].

Evaluate the following limit: [latex]\underset{x\to 7}{\mathrm{lim}}\left(\dfrac{{x}^{2}-11x+28}{7-x}\right)[/latex].

Evaluate [latex]\underset{x\to 5}{\mathrm{lim}}\left(\dfrac{\frac{1}{x}-\frac{1}{5}}{x - 5}\right)[/latex].

Evaluate [latex]\underset{x\to -5}{\mathrm{lim}}\left(\dfrac{\frac{1}{5}+\frac{1}{x}}{10+2x}\right)[/latex].