1.4 Estimating Limit Values from Tables

Learning Objectives

  • Estimate a limit using numerical tables of function values.
  • Recognize convergence (approaching a single value) versus divergence.
  • Use tables to support graphical and algebraic reasoning.

Motivation

When a graph is complicated or unavailable, we can build a table of values around the point of interest. If the outputs settle toward a number, that’s the estimated limit.

How to Estimate from Tables

  1. Pick values of \(x\) close to the target \(a\), both smaller and larger.
  2. Compute \(f(x)\) for each chosen \(x\).
  3. Observe whether the outputs approach a single number.
  4. If they do, that’s the limit. If left and right differ, the limit DNE.

Example 1: \( \frac{x^2-1}{x-1} \) as \(x\to 1\)

\(x\) \(f(x)\) \(x\) \(f(x)\)
0.91.91.12.1
0.991.991.012.01
0.9991.9991.0012.001

As values of \(x\) get closer to 1, \(f(x)\) approaches 2. So \( \lim_{x\to 1} \frac{x^2-1}{x-1} = 2 \).

Example 2: Oscillating Table

For \( f(x) = \sin\!\left(\tfrac{1}{x}\right) \) as \(x\to 0\):

\(x\) \(f(x)\)
0.1\(\sin(10)\approx -0.54\)
0.01\(\sin(100)\approx -0.51\)
0.001\(\sin(1000)\approx 0.83\)

The values jump around without settling → the limit does not exist.

Interactive Table Builder

Adjust \(a\) and \(h\). The table shows values of \(f(x)=\frac{x^2-1}{x-1}\) as \(x\) approaches \(a=1\) from both sides.

0.10

As \(h\to 0\), the table values approach 2, even though \(f(1)\) is undefined.

Quick Reference

  • Tables show numerical evidence of a limit.
  • Choose \(x\) close to \(a\) from both sides.
  • If outputs approach the same value, that’s the limit.
  • If outputs oscillate or differ, the limit DNE.

Try It

  1. Estimate \( \lim_{x\to 2} \frac{x^2-4}{x-2} \) using a table.
  2. Make a table for \( \frac{\sin x}{x} \) as \(x\to 0\). What value do you suspect?
  3. Use a table to explore \( \lim_{x\to 0} \sin\!\left(\tfrac{1}{x}\right) \). Why does it not exist?

Key Takeaways

  • Tables provide a numerical way to approximate limits.
  • Approach from both left and right sides.
  • Look for convergence — if values settle on a single number, that’s the limit.
  • If values diverge or oscillate, the limit does not exist.