Lisi Reisz wrote:
On Saturday 04 October 2008 23:04:08 Robert Holtzman wrote:
You're right about x^0
of course but your example of x^(1 + -1) doesn't look right. x^(1 + -1)
reduces to x^0 not x * 1/x.
x^0 = 1 x*1/x = 1, so they are the same. To take concrete examples: x^2 *
x^3 = x^(2+3) = x^5, say 2^2 * 2^3 = 8 * 16 = 128, 2^5 = 128
Lisi
I would be more inclined to say that the limit as x approaches zero of x
* 1/x is 1.
--
Andrew Pitonyak
My Macro Document: http://www.pitonyak.org/AndrewMacro.odt
My Book: http://www.hentzenwerke.com/catalog/oome.htm
Info: http://www.pitonyak.org/oo.php
See Also: http://documentation.openoffice.org/HOW_TO/index.html
---------------------------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]