So whenever a limit is evaluated, it’s correct to use the approximately equals sign (~) rather than equals. — Devans99
This could explain some of the rather peculiar results in calculus? — Devans99
No. Look up the definition of the limit in any modern textbook or online reference. — SophistiCat
'is the textbook definition correct?' — Devans99
The problem being if you take the result =0 and use it somewhere else, you have lost the information that it never actually =0, if you see what I mean. That could lead to an error. — Devans99
I know the textbook definition, the question the OP poses is: 'is the textbook definition correct?'. — Devans99
If you could provide an example of such an error that would make discussion a little easier — Mentalusion
The question in the OP indicates that you don't know or don't understand the textbook definition. — SophistiCat
What might happen is someone evaluates a limit and then they take the result as precise when it's only approximate — Devans99
If someone did that, they wouldn't understand properly what a limit is and would be trying to get out of it something which it doesn't purport to be able to achieve — Mentalusion
I think the approximation is built into the concept of limit so you don't need the extra notation — Mentalusion
No idea. — Devans99
Sometimes disciplines use specialized language because it's more precise and easier to deal with the technical nature of a topic, and knowledge consists of more than knowing the language that it happens to be written in — Moliere
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