Occasionally, one comes across a limit which results in
or
, which are called indeterminate limits. However, it is still possible to solve these by using L'Hôpital's rule. This rule is vital in explaining how other limits can be derived.
All of the following expressions are indeterminate forms.

These expressions are called indeterminate because you cannot determine their exact value in the indeterminate form. Depending on the situation, each indeterminate form could evaluate to a variety of values.
If
is indeterminate of type
or
,
then
, where
.
In other words, if the limit of the function is indeterminate, the limit equals the derivative of the top over the derivative of the bottom. If that is indeterminate, L'Hôpital's rule can be used again until the limit isn't
or
.
Suppose that for real functions
and
,
and that
exists. Thus
and
exist in an interval
around
, but maybe not at
itself. Thus, for any
, in any interval
or
,
and
are continuous and differentiable, with the possible exception of
. Define

Note that
,
, and that
are continuous in any interval
or
and differentiable in any interval
or
when
.
Cauchy's Mean Value Theorem (see 3.9) tells us that
for some
or
. Since
, we have
for
.
Since
or
, by the squeeze theorem

This implies

So taking the limit as
of the last equation gives
, which is equivalent to the more commonly used form
.
Find
Since plugging in 0 for x results in
, use L'Hôpital's rule to take the derivative of the top and bottom, giving:

Plugging in 0 for x gives 1 here.
Note that it is logically incorrect to prove this limit by using L'Hôpital's rule, as the same limit is required to prove that the derivative of the sine function exists: it would be a form of begging the question, or circular reasoning. An alternative way to prove this limit equal one is using squeeze theorem.
Find
First, you need to rewrite the function into an indeterminate limit fraction:

Now it's indeterminate. Take the derivative of the top and bottom:

Plugging in 0 for
once again gives 1.
Find
This time, plugging in
for x gives you
. So using L'Hôpital's rule gives:

Therefore,
is the answer.
Find
Plugging the value of x into the limit yields
(indeterminate form).
Let
|
|
|
|
|
|
We now apply L'Hôpital's rule by taking the derivative of the top and bottom with respect to
.
![{\displaystyle \ln(k)=\lim _{x\to \infty }{\frac {\ln \left(1+{\frac {1}{x}}\right)}{\frac {1}{x}}}=\lim _{x\to \infty }{\frac {{\frac {d}{dx}}\left[\ln \left(1+{\frac {1}{x}}\right)\right]}{{\frac {d}{dx}}\left({\frac {1}{x}}\right)}}=\lim _{x\to \infty }{\frac {x}{x+1}}}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/973bf7b09797ca31a0696ae39d48fe73325e8686)
Since

We apply L'Hôpital's rule once again

Therefore

And

Similarly, this limit also yields the same result

This does not prove that
because using the same method,

Evaluate the following limits using L'Hôpital's rule:
Solutions