Infinity

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This article is about the symbol

Notation

Always qualify with a + or except where the meaning of can be unambiguously resolved

Examples

Sequences

Consider a sequence of reals (an)n=1R then the statement:

  • limn(an) or n
    is not ambiguous as n can only get bigger one way (as it's a natural number) we implicitly mean + here. This is fine.
  • limn(an)=
    Clearly means the sequence gets more and more negative, tending towards
  • limn(an)=+
    Clearly means the sequence gets more hugely positive, tending towards +
  • limn(an)= to mean limn(an)=+
    is wrong as this is a great notation for divergence, for example the sequence an=(1)nn diverges

So we now have 4 behaviours:

Behaviour Writing Reading
Convergence limn(an)=a The sequence an (tends towards|converges) to a
limn(an)=+ The sequence an (tends toward|converges) to [positive]
limn(an)= The sequence an (tends toward|converges) to negative
Divergence limn(an)= The sequence an diverges