MAPLE has a powerful capability to find a
limit. The MAPLE function that is used to find a limit is limit.
Example1:
find the limit of f(x) =
(x-2)/(x^2-1)
First define the function f(x)
> f:=x->(x-2)/(x^2 - 1);

Find the limit of f(x) as x approaches 0, 1, -1, infinity
> limit(f(x), x=0);
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> limit(f(x), x=1);
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> limit(f(x), x=-1);
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> limit(f(x), x=infinity);
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When x
approaches 1, -1 the limit does not exist therefore MAPLE gives undefined.
To convince ourselves about the function´s
behavior we can plot it.
> plot(f(x), x=-10..10, y=-10..10);

Example2:
a different behavior has
the limit of f(x) = (x-2)/(x-1)^2.
> f:=x->(x-2)/(x - 1)^2;

> limit(f(x), x=0);
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> limit(f(x), x=1);
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> limit(f(x), x=-1);
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> limit(f(x), x=infinity);
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> plot(f(x), x=-10..10, y=-10..10);

Example3:
find the limit of f(x)=|x|
as x -> 0. To write in MAPLE the absolute value of x, use the command abs.
> f:=x->abs(x);
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> limit(f(x), x=0);
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Example3:
define f(x) = sin(1/x).
Find the limit as x -> 0, and as x -> infinity. Plot the function.
> f:=x->sin(1/x);

> limit(f(x), x=0);
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> limit(f(x), x=infinity);
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> plot(f(x), x=-10..10, y=-1.5..1.5);

f(x) is not continuous at as x -> 0 because its limit is ?1..1. It is continuous everywhere else since limit f(x) = 0 as x -> .
Exercises:
Find the limit of the fallowing
functions a) as x -> 0; b) as x->. Plot them.