The Student Room Group
Reply 1
sin is an alternating function so there is no limit
though i have to say i don't understand your question.
it shouldn't matter if n is real or natural as they would both tend to the same limit as n tends to infinity
Reply 2
cjxnn
Where n is a real number.



PS: I have solved the case when n is a natural number, but I have no clue when n is real.

Pretty certain it's undefined
Reply 3
oh yeah, i'm thinking of cos
i'm terrible at maths between june and september
Reply 4
yeah i suppose that's a silly mistake on my part.
probably because every question i ever get in class is for a sequence like {an}n=0\left\{ a_n \right\}_{n=0}^{\infty} where n is natural etc
Reply 5
munn
yeah i suppose that's a silly mistake on my part.
probably because every question i ever get in class is for a sequence like {an}n=0\left\{ a_n \right\}_{n=0}^{\infty} where n is natural etc


also just because a function is alternating does not mean it doesn't converge

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