"n" Pushes it to the limit
Created on: August 2nd, 2006
"n" Pushes it to the limit
The limit as "n" Approaches infinity.

Sponsorships:

Vote metrics:

rating total votes favorites comments
(3.66) 221 10 32

View metrics:

today yesterday this week this month all time
0 0 0 0 7,174

Inbound links:

views url
41 https://www.bing.com
5 http://www.google.com.hk
3 http://216.18.188.175:80
1 http://ytmnsfw.com/users/TippyTipster
1 http://ytmnsfw.com/users/TippyTipster/

Add a comment

Please login or register to comment.
August 2nd, 2006
(1)
MATH FTW
August 2nd, 2006
(0)
I heart you
August 2nd, 2006
(0)
it equals 1, which is excatly 2 less than this site gets from me.
August 3rd, 2006
(0)
Gotta love math sites. My calculus one didn't do well, but they can't all be winners. :)
August 3rd, 2006
(0)
Clever
August 3rd, 2006
(0)
Archimedes is the man now dog
August 3rd, 2006
(0)
To infinity... and beyond!!
August 3rd, 2006
(0)
god i hated learning that limit crap. good thing i did or i wouldn't understand ytmnds like this....THANK YOU HIGH SCHOOL MATH!!
August 3rd, 2006
(0)
LOL MATH FTW!
August 3rd, 2006
(0)
another useless thing i remember from calculus class...
August 3rd, 2006
(0)
i'm sure this has been done before, but i still like it!
August 3rd, 2006
(0)
Math jokes will always rule.
August 3rd, 2006
(0)
yay math!
August 3rd, 2006
(0)
nigg* stole my limits!
August 3rd, 2006
(0)
WINfinity
August 3rd, 2006
(0)
+5 for pushing math to the limit, -2 cause its math
August 3rd, 2006
(0)
If I 5 this, people will think I'm smart!
August 3rd, 2006
(0)
August 3rd, 2006
(0)
August 3rd, 2006
(0)
f*ck yeah! Why didn't I ever think of that...
August 3rd, 2006
(0)
MATH FTL
August 3rd, 2006
(0)
yay for compounding at intervals!!
(0)
Calculus with an extremely old sound clip sure is hilarious.
August 3rd, 2006
(0)
MATH FTW
August 3rd, 2006
(0)
Come on, you can come up with something more complicated then that. Make us think a little.
August 3rd, 2006
(0)
Don't drink and derive. d/dx 3x^4 = 12x^3
August 3rd, 2006
(0)
Works for me.
August 3rd, 2006
(0)
I meant...umm...beer!
August 3rd, 2006
(0)
As n becomes larger, the addition of one in the denominator becomes less and less significant (1/1+1 is less than 100/101), causing the fraction to approach one. Calculus FTW!!!
August 4th, 2006
(0)
Man, I'm a dork for knowing this...
December 14th, 2006
(0)
dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick
February 22nd, 2007
(0)
damn it Beavis, if I wanted to see math, I'd go to school