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When to Use L'Hopital's Rule

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L'Hopital's Rule is powerful, but it's not always the best choice. Sometimes factoring is faster. Sometimes L'Hopital makes things worse. Let's learn when to use it - and when NOT to.

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Decision Framework

Use L'Hopital when:
- Factoring doesn't work (trig, exponentials, logs)
- The expression is complicated
- You've verified it's 0/0 or infinity/infinity

Don't use L'Hopital when:
- Simple factoring will work
- It's NOT an indeterminate form
- The derivatives make things more complex

When NOT to Use L'Hopital
Easy
Find lim[x->2] (x^2 - 4)/(x - 2)
1
Bad approach: L'Hopital
Would give: 2x/1 = 4 at x=2 This works but is overkill!
2
Better approach: Factor
(x^2-4)/(x-2) = (x+2)(x-2)/(x-2) = x+2 = 4
Answer: 4
💡 Both methods work, but factoring is simpler for polynomials!
Infinity/Infinity Form
Medium
Find lim[x->infinity] (3x^2 + 2x)/(5x^2 - 1)
1
Check the form
As x->infinity, both top and bottom go to infinity: infinity/infinity ✓
2
Apply L'Hopital
= lim[x->infinity] (6x + 2)/(10x) Still infinity/infinity!
3
Apply L'Hopital again
= lim[x->infinity] 6/10 = 3/5
Answer: 3/5
💡 For rational functions, the limit equals the ratio of leading coefficients when degrees are equal

Practice

1. lim[x->infinity] (2x^3)/(x^3 + 1) = ?
0
1
2
infinity
Key Takeaways
  • Check if you have 0/0 or infinity/infinity FIRST

  • Try simple methods (factoring) before L'Hopital

  • L'Hopital shines with trig, exponentials, and logs

  • You can apply L'Hopital multiple times if needed