L'Hôpital's Rule

Evaluates certain indeterminate limits using the limit of a quotient of derivatives
L’Hôpital’s Rule

L’Hôpital’s Rule (0/0 form, one-sided): Let a<ba<b, and let f,g:[a,b)Rf,g:[a,b)\to\mathbb{R} be on [a,b)[a,b) and on (a,b)(a,b). Assume:

  • f(a)=g(a)=0f(a)=g(a)=0,
  • g(x)0g'(x)\neq 0 for all x(a,b)x\in(a,b),
  • the limit L=limxa+f(x)g(x)L=\lim_{x\to a^+}\frac{f'(x)}{g'(x)} exists in R{±}\mathbb{R}\cup\{\pm\infty\}.

Then the limit limxa+f(x)g(x)\lim_{x\to a^+}\frac{f(x)}{g(x)} exists and equals LL: limxa+f(x)g(x)=limxa+f(x)g(x)=L. \lim_{x\to a^+}\frac{f(x)}{g(x)}=\lim_{x\to a^+}\frac{f'(x)}{g'(x)}=L.

This rule is a standard tool for evaluating difficult limits, but it must be used with all hypotheses in place (especially the differentiability and nonvanishing of gg' near the limit point).