View Full Version : remainder of division by zero and infinity??
cronodragon
01-04-2008, 09:19 PM
I know the division of a/(+-inf) = 0, and the division of a/0 = undefined, but what's the remainder? :S Can't find it anywhere!
Thanks for your help!
arthurprs
01-04-2008, 09:54 PM
a/inf is = 0 (at least my professor says that)
cronodragon
01-04-2008, 10:32 PM
That's what I understand :D But what about the remainder?
Ñuño Martínez
02-04-2008, 08:38 AM
Undefined?
Rahakasvi
02-04-2008, 04:39 PM
I wondered whether I would say this, but I just can't be silent since i'm studying mathematics x)
In real number area there are no such numbers as "+inf" or "-inf", so therefore you can't divide a (let a be any real number) by "infinity"
What you are referring is, if you take function f(x)=a/x and take limit what happens, when you increase "x towards infinity" to the value of function, and you say:
a/x -> 0 when x -> oo.
Which is to be read a/x convergences towards zero, when x grows limitlessly.
And a/0 is not defined and it doesn't have a remainder..
btw if you take what happens when you have the same function f(x)=a/x and let x go towards zero from left side and you get
a/x -> oo, when x-> 0-
so when x go towards zero from left f(x) grows limitlessly.
Hope this helps.
cronodragon
02-04-2008, 05:09 PM
Thanks Rahakasvi. So it seems the remainder is equal to the quotient in both cases, that would confirm my suspects. :D
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