Limit Basics
Continuity
Limit Calculations
Derivative Concepts
Derivative Applications
100

What is a limit?

The value a function approaches as the input approaches a point.

100

What is continuity at a point?

The function value equals the limit at that point with no gaps or jumps.

100

How do you find the limit of (3x + 1) as x approaches 2?

Substitute x = 2; limit is 3 times 2 plus 1 equals 7.

100

What is the derivative of a function at a point?

The instantaneous rate of change or slope of the tangent line at that point.

100

What does a positive derivative indicate about a function?

The function is increasing at that point.

200

What does it mean if the limit of f(x) as x approaches a equals L?

As x gets closer to a, f(x) gets closer to L.

200

Name one type of discontinuity.

Jump discontinuity, removable discontinuity, or infinite discontinuity.

200

How do you handle limits that give 0 divided by 0?

Use algebraic simplification or factoring to eliminate the indeterminate form.

200

State the power rule for derivatives.

The derivative of x to the n is n times x to the (n minus 1).

200

How do you find critical points?

Set the derivative equal to zero or find where it does not exist and solve.

300

What is the difference between one-sided limits?

Left-hand limit approaches from values less than a; right-hand limit from values greater than a.

300

What must be true for f(x) to be continuous at x = a?

f(a) is defined, the limit of f(x) as x approaches a exists, and both are equal.

300

Find the limit of (x squared minus 1) divided by (x minus 1) as x approaches 1.

Factor numerator: (x minus 1)(x plus 1) over (x minus 1) equals x plus 1; substitute x = 1, limit is 2.

300

What derivative rule would you use to find the derivative of x squared times sine x?

The product rule.

300

How can derivatives help find local maxima and minima?

Use the first or second derivative test on critical points.

400

Why are limits important in calculus?

They help define instantaneous rates of change and the derivative.

400

How can continuity affect limit calculations?

If f is continuous at a, then the limit of f(x) as x approaches a equals f(a).

400

Evaluate the limit of sine x divided by x as x approaches 0.

The limit is 1 (a standard trigonometric limit).

400

Write the chain rule formula in words.

The derivative of a composite function f of g of x equals the derivative of f at g(x) times the derivative of g at x.

400

What does the second derivative tell you?

It tells if the function is concave up (second derivative positive) or concave down (second derivative negative).

500

What does it mean if a limit does not exist?

The function approaches different values from left and right or grows without bound.

500

Can a function be continuous on an interval but not differentiable there? Give an example.

Yes; for example, f(x) = absolute value of x is continuous everywhere but not differentiable at x = 0.

500

Explain how to find limits approaching infinity for rational functions.

Compare degrees of numerator and denominator; if degrees are equal, limit is the ratio of leading coefficients.

500

Find the derivative of (x squared plus 1) divided by x using the quotient rule.

The derivative is [(2x)(x) minus (x squared plus 1)(1)] divided by x squared, which simplifies to (x squared minus 1) divided by x squared.

500

Explain how derivatives are used in optimization problems.

Find where the derivative is zero to identify maximum or minimum values for practical problems.

M
e
n
u